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The Night of the Triffids

Audiobook
55 of 55 copies available
55 of 55 copies available

In John Wyndham's classic The Day of the Triffids the world is overwhelmed by killer plants. Simon Clark's sequel picks up the story 25 years on. Bill Masen's son, David, wakes to a world plunged into darkness. Now, the triffids have the advantage...

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 18, 2002
      In John Wyndham's The Day of the Triffids
      (1951), mankind is overtaken—and much of it blinded—by the demonic walking plant of the title, a monster created in a lab in an act of Cold War profiteering. Clark (Vampyrrhic, etc.) picks up the story more than 25 years later, puts a new narrator at the helm and spins a brisk and engaging adventure-cum-horror yarn. Clark's narrator is David Masen, son of scientist Bill Masen (the protagonist from Wyndham's book). The Masen family, along with a handful of other survivors, has set up an outpost on the Isle of Wight, and have gone about rebuilding society. A major part of this renewal involves a particularly bizarre idea called the Mother House, a convent-like home where women spend their lives giving birth over and over again. All seems well, until one morning when the sun doesn't rise and the triffids, long thought condemned to the mainland, attack. Clearly marketed as a genre horror title, this crafty continuation is elegant in its construction. Clark's prose is clean, thoughtful and perfectly suited to his faux doomsday-memoir approach. Less cautionary than the original, but more literary than many books of its ilk, this is a truly enjoyable voyage. (Dec. 15)FYI:In September 2002, Clark received two British Fantasy Awards—one for
      The Night of the Triffids and one for the short story "Goblin City Lights."

    • AudioFile Magazine
      A generation after the triffid invasion depicted in John Wyndham's THE DAY OF THE TRIFFIDS, a cloud blocking the sun plunges the Earth into darkness. David Masen, son of the triffid expert who helped establish a colony of survivors on the Isle of Wight, crash-lands while on an investigative flight. He soon learns of new threats from both the fast-evolving triffids and the warlike city of New York. Reading this first-person account, Stephen Pacey gives Masen a gentleman's grace, maintaining a sense of fun as the hero delves into questions of morality, scientific mystery, and father-son relationships. He also makes the old-fashioned language of the novel seem natural. J.A.S. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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