Dead of Summer

Dead Of Summer is a Zombie Apocalypse webcomic written by Marty 'F'nday' and Nick 'Ghostfreehood'. At the moment, it is complete, though Nick has stated that it "isn't necessarily over but for the moment. I can't say when it could return but before my life's work is over, it will be done."

The comic is divided into two distinct Books, each set in Baltimore. Book 1 revolves around the adventures of the main character, Nick, as he wakes up one morning to find the city overrun by the undead. While his major priority is to escape, he soon runs across other survivors--Marty, Dan, and Ed, to name a few. They begin to adventure across the city, killing copious zombies along the way. And that's just the beginning. Tensions rise, as does the body count, as one by one, Nick's newfound allies are killed. Soon, he's the only one of the group left. Overcome with exhaustion and guilt, contemplating suicide, he collapses as a zombie approaches.

Nick wakes up in a room, on a pile of zombified bodies. He is somehow perfectly alive and well. End Book 1.

Book 2 picks up right where Book 1 left off. Nick discovers that he's in the Baltimore Zoo, which has been taken over by the military. Dr. Alan Stone and his wife, Lydia, are scientists with a plan to destroy the zombies. But Lydia seems occupied with a dead monkey, Tito, and there's hints that Alan's not quite right in the head. Not to mention William, the head zoologist, who's bitter about the zoo being taken over. Eventually, both he and Nick are exiled into the irradiated city...

The rest really needs to be read.

The archive can be found here, and the first comic can be found here. Normally the wiki would link to the main page, but the main page has the very last page of the comic on it. (Currently the links are from the Internet Archive, as the site proper has been hacked)

""If they can hear me, they can help me. Please, God...let them hear me.""
 * And I Must Scream: A comic page has this as the title, and it does happen with, who's found at the bottom of a cliff, tied up, with a bag over his head. As revealed in his inner monologue, however, he starts screaming in the hopes that anyone can hear him.

""We will not go quietly into the night!""
 * In a straighter example, one can only wonder if.
 * Anyone Can Die: Since it's a Zombie Apocalypse, it's natural that both good guys and bad guys bite it now and then.
 * Arch Enemy:, to  . A background character comments that 'they want[ed] each other dead.'
 * Art Evolution: Book 2 has a much cleaner art style.
 * Bee-Bee Gun: While the type of insect isn't specified,  is on the receiving end of this in Book 2.
 * Big Bad: The zombies, but also  A case can also be made for
 * Body Horror: What  becomes.
 * Breakout Character: . According to the comic's author,.
 * By the Power of Greyskull: Invoked, and lampshaded. Doubles as a Crowning Moment of Funny.
 * Camera Fiend: Matt.
 * The Chessmaster: Alan and.
 * Cloning Blues: Averted; the clone is homicidal, loyal to the baddies, and proud of it.
 * Cool Bike: Nick and Marty find these.  rides one, too.
 * Cruel and Unusual Death: It has a lot of deaths, being a Zombie Apocalypse story. One among them stands out, though. Getting your eyes torn out, then having a huge electrical wire jammed into your mouth.
 * Deadpan Snarker: Nick, at points.  are also this,   in particular.
 * Do Not Go Gentle: The poem is referenced.

"'There was no one more soulless than Dr. Alan Stone.'"
 * Does Not Know His Own Strength: Ed picks up a huge rock and throws it, crushing zombies... but causing a cave-in, which swiftly becomes a flood.
 * Dreaming of Things to Come: Nick has this happen, but it's more like 'Dreaming Of Things Happening Now.'
 * Drunk with Power: Used as a page title as  does some Evil Gloating, though it's closer to Drunk on the Dark Side.
 * Everything's Better with Monkeys: Tito.
 * Everything's Worse with Bears: How do you make a grizzly bear even scarier? Make it a ZOMBIE!
 * Evil Brit: One of the bad guys in Book 2 has a British accent. As expected, he's evil.
 * Evil Chancellor:  Though it's a slight subversion in that the other characters know he's evil.
 * Evil Twin:
 * Eye Scream: Done by  to
 * Face Heel Turn:
 * Family-Unfriendly Death
 * Family-Unfriendly Violence
 * For Science!: Said verbatim by Alan as he  It doesn't end well.
 * Friend to All Living Things: Lydia has shades of this. This also includes being a friend to undead things, at least as far as animals go.
 * Groin Attack: Used multiple times on Matt, with Len getting so fed up he tells the girls to stop.
 * Guinea Pig Family:
 * Just in Time:  returns just in time to disarm a Time Bomb, and   returns to save everyone from a zombie grizzly bear.
 * Kill and Replace: This is, presumably, part of.
 * Kill'Em All: By the end of Book 1, most of the characters we'd been following are dead or unaccounted for, with Nick as the only survivor.
 * In Book 2, this is.
 * Kirby Dots
 * Ludicrous Gibs
 * Life Embellished: Nick and Marty, anyone? Played with in that Marty the character
 * Mad Scientist: Dr. Alan Stone. Also his wife, Lydia, to an extent.
 * Meaningful Name: Lampshaded by William:


 * Mistaken for Dead: Nick is this at the end of Book 1.
 * Ms. Fanservice: Kaylee and Emma in Book 1. Lydia has moments of this in Book 2.
 * My Secret Pregnancy:
 * Nightmare Sequence: Nick has one of these in Book 2. The beginning is especially horrific.
 * No Celebrities Were Harmed: Averted. Zombie versions of some bands, both local and famous, appear in Book 1.
 * Non-Action Big Bad: . This may explain some of why he's evil; he didn't get any cool powers.
 * Not Himself: To fans of,  actions will induce confusion and fear. While breaking a bad guy's finger is pretty cool, something doesn't seem right.   And if that doesn't unsettle you,
 * Not-So-Harmless Villain: Alan. While not physically imposing, he beats the tar out of a sympathetic character, and is revealed to have Sinister Surveillance almost everywhere, which lets him know a great deal of secrets. A crossing of the Moral Event Horizon later and it's hard to remember that he seemed wimpy at first.   and his lackeys have some of this too.
 * More on . His two henchmen don't even get names, all three are portrayed as Large Hams, and you figure they're no match for the good guys... Then they.
 * One-Hit Kill: Done to most zombies, as well as to
 * Painful Transformation:
 * Playing with Syringes: Alan and Lydia both do this, with Alan being more malicious in intent.
 * Professor Guinea Pig: Alan is this, testing a potentially dangerous 'cure' for zombism on himself.
 * The Protomen: Nick and Marty saw a show while working on the comic.
 * Rage Against the Heavens: Alan does this, after
 * Reckless Sidekick: Matt, due to his love of taking pictures.
 * Ridiculously-Human Robots:
 * Rip Van Winkle: At the end of Book 1, Nick collapses from exhaustion. When he wakes up, the other characters explain that he's been out for about a year. Notable in that as far as we know, they're not lying.
 * Single-Stroke Battle: More literal than usual, as  doesn't even get a chance to move before being destroyed.
 * Sinister Surveillance: Alan Stone not only has cameras IN the zoo, but outside it as well.
 * Shock and Awe: What  powers seem to be.
 * Shoot the Dog: Done to Zombie Infectees.
 * Officer Len does it to himself after being bitten.
 * Spanner in the Works: Tito and Otis save
 * Spontaneous Crowd Formation: At 's assembly, the crowd turns into an Angry Mob... which turns into a passive crowd again as the heroes step forward.
 * Spot the Imposter: Averted. The deal with  may seem to be leading into this, but it's over with one strike.
 * Survivor Guilt: Nick engages in this near the end of Book 1.
 * Take That: One delivered at the Bush Administration here.
 * The Swarm: Seen here and in the first panel here.
 * Those Two Bad Guys:  nameless lackeys.
 * Time Bomb:  is converted into this. Most likely unwillingly.
 * Token Evil Teammate:  fills this role. Unlike most examples, it's Played for Drama.
 * Total Party Kill: At the end of Book 1. Sort of.
 * Ugly Guy, Hot Wife: Alan and Lydia.
 * Unexplained Recovery:.
 * The Unfought: . This makes his status unknown, though he can be presumed dead.
 * Villain with Good Publicity: Subverted;  only wishes he was this. Played straighter with
 * Wham! Episode: The ending of Book 1, as well as the introduction of  in Book 2.
 * In Book 2, there's the 'noctural activities' sequence, where good guys get horrific injuries inflicted upon them, bad guys set up their evil plans, and
 * What Happened To the Girls?: The girls in Book 1 disappear from the story after being knocked out by Ed.
 * Given that this is a Zombie Apocalypse, we can presume they were eaten.
 * What Measure Is a Non-Human?: Explored with the character of Tito, who happens to be a monkey and, later, a zombie.
 * The Worm That Walks: While it's not made clear, one of  lackeys may be one of these. He can summon a swarm of insects seemingly out of nowhere (the art suggests they either come from around him or inside him), and have them attack.   is swarmed and bitten so much his movements are slowed, and he screams that they're eating him alive.
 * Xanatos Gambit:  scheme to take over.
 * Zombie Apocalypse: Naturally.