People were fabulous about it and offered me a ton of suggestions. And today, for your reading pleasure, 3 mini book reviews:

When I finished, I was fascinated by a few aspects of the book, mainly, the demonstrations of his logic and reasoning. I dug a little on the old Internet to determine if this is typical of our understanding of autistic reasoning and found a truly mixed bag. Many professionals and at least one reviewer who genuinely suffers from autism poo-poo'd these details as being not at all accurate. But more professionals and at least one organization praised it as being very accurate and helpful. In either case, I really enjoyed The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nightime, and it definitely made me curious; which is a truly great thing for a book to accomplish.

I greatly enjoyed this take on post-zombie-apocalypse life for a couple of reasons. First of all, like many post apocalyptic stories, we see a very controlled society step in and replace individual freedom with safety. While this is a common theme, I found it very well handled, showing the imminent danger of conflict within the community and the near-necessity of many of their measures. It's easy to see how this slippery slope was started. Secondly, the community is ruled by a quasi-religious group that seems to not exist in our current world. Some aspects seem Catholic and some seem to be completely other, but they add up to a faith that did not just step in to rule in chaos, but one that was created from the chaos.
I just found out that there is a sequel, The Dead Tossed Waves and it is currently on hold for me at the library.

The only word I can use here is artful. Never before have I felt more hungry after finishing a book. Were this a series, I would have read the whole series in one sitting. As it is, I was left longing for more with a deep, painful longing.
So many questions were left unanswered. So many story lines lingered after the final page. Not loose ends, exactly, because they were questions that really didn't need an answer. Just a lingering thread begging to be picked back up.
The only thing I can truly say that I didn't enjoy about the book was the repetitive nature. If the author told us once that humans and vampires had never-ever worked together, she told us 27 times. There was a point where I literally turned it over and yelled at the cover that "I get it already. It never happens. You might be evil. Oh my goodness, get over it."
But the story itself, masterful.
In short, you guys did an truly excellent job and despite the fact that I still have a lengthy list at my disposal, I think you should try again. Tell me what to read!
Despite the fact that all of these links are Amazon links, I do not participate in their affiliate program. Just convenience. Promise.