Just in case you need some additional reading for Pride Month, I’d like to present to you Deathless Divide.
Written by Justina Ireland and published in 2020, Deathless Divide is a sequel to Dread Nation, which we reviewed earlier this year. And anyone who’s read Dread Nation was likely wild to get their hands on the sequel.
We start in Deathless Divide exactly where Dread Nation left off. Jane, Katherine and the survivors of Summerville are running for safety, a zombie hoard behind them. They find the town of Nicodemus, but the hoard is right behind them.
Soon enough the town falls, sending Jane and Katherine on different paths.
Katherine seeks a home, after mourning her friend. She heads to California, first to San Francisco. When that doesn’t work, she heads for a town called Haven. Where Jane’s mother is rumored to be.
Jane, on the other hand, is walking a far darker path. While she’s now immune to the walking dead, she’s down an arm. And she’s burning with a desire for vengeance. Abandoning her quest to find her mother, then everyone who loves her, she lives for only one purpose. Kill Gideon Carr, the man who brought down Summerville and Nicodemus with his mad experiments.
Overall, this was an incredible read. I continued to love the characters. Especially Ms. Preston’s girls, Jane, Katherine and Sue. (By the way, I was first introduced to this series through Sue, in a short story called Letters From Home. This was on the first episode of the podcast Nightlight. Sadly, this episode doesn’t appear to be available on their website or Spotify at this time. But if you can manage to find it, it’s a great story.)
I loved that Jane was bisexual, without that being the defining factor about her. She was also disabled, and that wasn’t even her defining factor. Her defining factor was that she was a badass zombie killer/bounty hunter with a soft spot for dogs and kids. Everything else is incidental.
I loved also that Katherine was asexual. She just didn’t give a damn about falling in love, and that wasn’t something that needed fixing about her. So often we see characters who aren’t interested in romance portrayed as broken. They were hurt in the past or grew up in an unhealthy family, so they’re just scared to love. But when they find that right person, who makes them feel safe, they can finally let down the walls of their heart and love again!
Nope, none of that. I’ll go ahead and spoil one thing for you. Katherine doesn’t have any romantic relationships. And she is a complete, happy person without them.
I appreciated that the villain in this story wasn’t just the undead. It never really is in the best zombie fiction. The real danger was Carr, who was in such a rush to find a vaccine that he killed hundreds all on his own. Through unethical practices and impatience, what could have been a godsend was turned into a nightmare. It’s a testament to the bloody history of medicine in America. And how even the best of intentions can still lead people to evil.
Honestly, Carr and his mad quest for a vaccine is a large reason why this series worked. And it’s written so well that we don’t even realize the lesson we’re being taught. Never once does Ireland mention the Tuskegee experiments. Maybe she wasn’t even trying to directly reference them. But they were heavy on my mind when Carr injected black individuals and then fed them to the undead for his experiments.
All of this being said, Deathless Divide wasn’t perfect.
I didn’t, honestly, like the ending. It felt rushed. Everything after the climax, at least, felt rushed. Not as bad as a Stephen King novel, but rushed. It was like the author wasn’t sure how to finish the story. I don’t want to ruin the ending for you, because you should read it yourself. But for a book 551 pages long, you’d think we could get a little more of a wrap-up with our surviving cast.
But this is a small matter. My complaints are regarding the last chapter or so. And there’s a whole lot of great story before that.
I do think the ending of Deathless Divide leaves room for a third book in the series. I don’t know if Justina Ireland plans to write a third one. But I, at least, would be more than ready to snap it up if she does.

(4.5 / 5)