Eisner and GLAAD-Award nominated writer Tate Brombal and artist Jacob Edgar don’t attempt to reinvent the zombie apocalypse with Everything Dead & Dying, and that simple fact works in its favor. Leaving out why and when the world ended, this series zeroes in on a smaller sliver of the painful world left behind. It’s familiar territory, but a more intimate and harder hitting zombie story that stands out from the crowd.
Instead of getting bogged down in how the world ended or where the plague came from, the comic zeroes in on something much smaller and more painful: the people left behind. Tate Brombal tells a tight, focused story about one family in one moment, letting the emotional weight do the heavy lifting.
Jack Chandler is the sole survivor of the zombie apocalypse in his rural farming community, but rather than eliminate them, he has chosen to continue living alongside the undead — including the husband and adopted daughter he fought so hard to have. But when his town is discovered by outsiders, Jack suddenly becomes the one thing standing in the way of his family and those who hope to kill them for good.
I am a sucker for any sort of zombie story in comic, movie, tv, or book format. It doesn’t really matter. Whether it’s the likes of Night of the Living Dead, The Last of Us, or The Walking Dead, I am game. So when you add in the likes of Brombal and Phillips to the mix, Everything Dead & Dying was a must read.
As a huge The Walking Dead fan, I have been searching for that comic story to fill my the void left by the series ending with issue 193 in 2019. Everything Dead & Dying scratches that itch and while TWD will always sit high up for me, what this series does is step up certain spots and zooms way in on a particular story thread which makes it excel.
Everything Dead & Dying is not a groundbreaking comic, but what it does do is give us a short story in a small portion of the post apocalyptic world. Not focusing on the why and where this plague took over, but the human aspect of it all. Brombal purposely focuses on this specific family in this short period of time. This allows for less distractions and puts this story in the forefront.
Similar to some other stories, but still setting itself apart, is the fact that during a zombie apocalypse it’s the humans who are the real monsters. This happens both in the past in present of this story, where never wait for tomorrow to show your love for someone when you can today.
What makes this book standout from the zombie horde is the beautifully horrific and disturbing illustrations from Phillips. But it’s not just those visualizations, it’s the way they go back-and-forth between a more serine past and the bleak and unsettling present.
Everything Dead & Dying is a dark, disturbing, and unsettling slice of the zombie apocalypse. Tate Brombal creates a story that is touching while also extremely sad, while Jacob Phillips beautifully illustrates a world after the fall. Everything Dead & Dying is a well crafted zombie tale in a well-worn path of zombie stories.
The collected edition of Everything Dead & Dying hits local comic shops on April 8, 2026 and May 5 (FOC: March 2) at bookstores everywhere from Image Comics.


