There’s something deeply unsettling about the American desert at night. The silence isn’t empty—it’s waiting. And in Valley of Death, Zombie Trailer Park, William Bebb turns that silence into a living, breathing nightmare.
Just outside Albuquerque, hidden in a forgotten valley, the howling starts.
At first, people tell themselves it’s coyotes. It’s always coyotes.
They’re wrong.
A Wrong Turn That Changes Everything
When Josey drives his truck down into the valley, he isn’t looking for trouble. He’s looking for answers. What he finds instead is a place cut off from the world—a trailer park full of society’s castoffs, survivors, and lost souls.
Illegal immigrants hiding from the system.
A World War II veteran carrying ghosts of his own.
A hermit who abandoned civilization.
A bitter old woman with nothing left to lose.
A family of meth-cooking degenerates known as the Redneck Gourmets.
And one beautiful young woman who doesn’t belong in a place like this.
It’s a fragile ecosystem of desperation and routine.
Until Juan dies.
And then Juan doesn’t stay dead.
These Aren’t Just Zombies. They’re Something Worse.
William Bebb doesn’t waste time arguing over zombie definitions—and neither should you.
Are they dead?
Are they insane?
Are they monsters?
They’re all of it.
And they’re hungry.
What begins as a tragic accident spirals into a brutal chain reaction of violence, fear, and survival. Neighbors become prey. Friends become predators. And the valley becomes a feeding ground where the line between human and monster disappears completely.
Out here, death isn’t the worst thing that can happen to you.
Horror With Teeth, Heart, and Humanity
What makes Valley of Death, Zombie Trailer Park stand out isn’t just the carnage—it’s the people.
These aren’t generic horror victims waiting to die. They’re flawed, human, and painfully real. You’ll care about them. You’ll root for them.
And then you’ll watch what happens to them.
Bebb combines raw desert atmosphere, grim humor, and relentless horror into a story that feels equal parts grindhouse nightmare and tragic character study.
It’s brutal.
It’s disturbing.
And it’s impossible to put down.
Welcome to Albuquerque Springs Trailer Park
Where the rattlesnakes aren’t the biggest threat.
Where the dead don’t stay buried.
And where once you enter…
You may never leave.





