"Hunger" is a series that appeared in a zombie catastrophe. Of course, it is done, it is done quite often, but as my readers had expected, hunger is a zombie apocalypse. It is deeply involved in serious defects, and the dynamics of the relationship certainly creates some emotional charge moments that resonate with the audience, and some mysteries that help to advance the plot. "Hunger" is about families being broken by the living environment. This is a doctor named Mark Downing where there are two daughters. Langdon, the oldest daughter, suffered from a disease that could kill her life, and Bailey, the youngest daughter, disappeared in the shadow of her sister's illness. This is a story of a man who desperately saved his daughter and is about to repair his broken relationship with other daughters. This is all done in a zombie catastrophe.
In science fiction, I think the zombie apocalypse has various symptoms and carries various meanings of cargo. To illustrate, the basic principle of the existence of zombies is usually related to the lack of available storage space in hell and is irrelevant to the plague - the workings of the heart of Bacillus, viruses, fungi or aliens - insects. The contemporary fear of the pandemic caused by the near miss of SARS and H1N1 is clearly very relevant here. However, there is also an existential aspect of the threat posed by zombies. A zombie is just a human figure, it looks like us, but there is no spark of consciousness. They remind us that our own personality can be abolished. Being a zombie means to lose something to make you human - so these revelations tear us from the inside and make the loss of the heroic property of the Roland Emmerich movie more subtle and destructive I will replace it. Your own self is ruthlessly collapsing, your soul