The 11 Best Postapocalyptic Books For Walking Dead Fans

The Walking Dead made a splash when it finally returned to our screens in October. Whether or not you watch the show on a weekly basis, it's virtually impossible to avoid zombie fever when the series is on the air — and if you are a fan, it's almost impossible to wait a full week before getting your fix. So in the spirit of all things postapocalyptic, we've put together a list of the 11 books that take place after the world has been thrown into chaos: from zombies to robots to global catastrophe, these are the stories that any TWD fan needs to read.

01
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel

Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel

After a brutal pandemic wipes out a large portion of civilization, every person is left to fend for themselves in order to survive. It's in this context that Station Eleven's protagonists have assembled, a ragtag group of actors who travel the continent performing music and theater for those who have survived. It's a love story, a story of the fundamental struggles to move forward in uncertain times, and ultimately, a reminder of how humanity can thrive under the least-likely circumstances.

02
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline

Ready Player One by Ernest Cline

Ernest Cline's masterwork Ready Player One takes place in 2044, a time when the world is in ruins and the only solace to be found is in within a virtual gaming network called OASIS. But within that game is a quest for the ultimate Easter egg that can change the life of anyone who finds it, a challenge that requires the most extensive knowledge of pop culture and video game culture imaginable. So when Wade Watts finds the first clue to the puzzle, the clock starts ticking down and he's on the race of his life to find the ultimate way to transcend the brutal reality around him.

03
The Country of Ice Cream Star by Sandra Newman

The Country of Ice Cream Star by Sandra Newman

When a plague hits America and wipes out everyone over the age of 20, the children are left to fend for themselves in The Country of Ice Cream Star. Clans are formed and ways of life are developed, but as Ice Cream Star's brother approaches the age at which his life will end, she makes it her mission to find the cure — no matter how dangerous that journey may be.

04
Odds Against Tomorrow by Nathaniel Rich

Odds Against Tomorrow by Nathaniel Rich

Mitchell Zukor studies the worst-case scenarios for disasters for a living. So when the actual end of times comes for New York City, he's uniquely placed to rise to the occasion and attempt to rebuild the future. An obsession with the effects of our present on our future underlies the plot of Odds Against Tomorrow, but it's truly the story of what happens next that makes it well worth reading.

05
Gold Fame Citrus by Claire Vaye Watkins

Gold Fame Citrus by Claire Vaye Watkins

The near-future version of California, ravished by drought, is the backdrop for Gold Fame Citrus, but the real story comes out of the relationship between a surfer and a poster child who find a mysterious child at a rave and depart the only safety they've known since the crisis began in search of a better life for the next generation.

06
Robopocalypse by Daniel H. Wilson

Robopocalypse by Daniel H. Wilson

When a sentient virus invades computers across the world, a new war begins between humans and machines. The surprising part? The humans are joined by "freeborn" robots who fight on behalf of a free and stable future. Oh, and the author of Robopocalypse is a former robotics engineer, which serves to make the book feel real on an unprecedented level.

07
California by Edan Lepucki

California by Edan Lepucki

When Los Angeles falls apart, the last thing that Frida wants to do is bring a new life into the world. But that's exactly what happens when she becomes pregnant. She and her husband attempt to find a community that isn't too frightened to accept other stragglers in the new world. California is an exploration of the boundaries of humanity, and the risks we'll take in order to keep the ones we love safe.

08
The Only Ones by Carola Dibbell

The Only Ones by Carola Dibbell

The Only Ones is about those humans that are immune to the infertility that has struck the entire populace, and as a result, they become the test subjects on which the future of the world rests. But one of these immune individuals, Inez, is given a greater task: protecting a child who has been born against the odds, regardless of the challenges that are thrown her way.

09
The Water Knife by Paolo Bacigalupi

The Water Knife by Paolo Bacigalupi

When western America runs out of water in The Water Knife, they become reliant on vigilantes who "cut" water to survive. But when it becomes clear that there's a source of water that hasn't yet been tapped in Arizona, a journalist, an immigrant, and a "Water Knife" team up to try to get to the bottom of why the water isn't being shared with all — a dangerous undertaking that reveals a complicated network of crime and corruption that's reached far further than any one of them could've imagined.

10
World War Z by Max Brooks

World War Z by Max Brooks

The ultimate zombie tale isn't The Walking Dead, it's Max Brooks' bestselling World War Z. Centered around various characters flung across the country during the great zombie apocalypse, the book is an oral history of the zombie war, giving insight from all sides of the catastrophe.

11
Find Me by Laura Van Den Berg

Find Me by Laura Van Den Berg

Joy is immune to the plague that's sweeping the country, but that doesn't mean that she's immune to the everyday evils of being a lost 20-something in the modern world. Find Me tracks one woman's journey across a devastated country to find her birth mother, the past she can't quite remember, and most importantly, herself.