Domain is the third in the series from Herbert, based on the mutant, giant killer rats. In my opinion it is the best of the three and can be enjoyed as a standalone book or if read in order as a trilogy it is even better.
OVERVIEW
London and the surrounding areas are hit with five nuclear ... Read review
Advantages: Excellent descriptions Disadvantages: It's the last one!
Domain is the third in the series from Herbert, based on the mutant, giant killer rats. In my opinion it is the best of the three and can be enjoyed as a standalone book or if read in order as a trilogy it is even better.
OVERVIEW
London and the surrounding areas are hit with five nuclear bombs. The warning sirens are very late to wail and very few have time to escape to shelters. Hundreds flee into underground railway ... ...out that will follow. Millions are simply blown to bits or crushed and mutilated from collapsing buildings.
Culver was on his way to the bank when the sirens began their frightening alarm, and whilst running to find appropriate shelter, he bumps into Dealey, a man who has been blinded by the flash of the bomb but who knows of a government shelter that will protect them if they can reach it.
Domain is the third in the series from Herbert, based on the mutant, giant killer rats. In my opinion it is the best of the three and can be enjoyed as a standalone book or if read in order as a trilogy it is even better.
OVERVIEW
London and the surrounding areas are hit with five nuclear bombs. The warning sirens are very late to wail and very few have time to escape to shelters. Hundreds flee into underground railway stations to avoid the blasts and the horrific radioactive fall out that will follow. Millions are simply blown to bits or crushed and mutilated from collapsing buildings.
Culver was on his way to the bank when the sirens began their frightening alarm, and whilst running to find appropriate shelter, he bumps into Dealey, a man who has been blinded by the flash of the bomb but who knows of a government shelter that will protect them if they can reach it.
Down into the tunnels of the underground station they go, watching countless atrocities along the way. But just before they find the secret door, located in the wall of the train tunnel, they also find the mutant rats, feeding off the people who had fled down there before.
OPINION
Well this is just the best of the trilogy in terms of gore and bloody description. Herbert really does go to town and with a topic like a nuclear blast to work with, he does not hold back. The reader will be deluged with full on descriptions of radiation sickness and the effects of the blast. Not to mention the injuries caused by rabid dogs and falling buildings. Add on the fatalities and horrific mutilations caused by the killer rats themselves and you have a pretty good horror book on your hands.
I have bemoaned the fact in previous write-ups about this trilogy, that Herbert did not include more of previous characters in the follow-ups, but this one held so much more character description that I was completely satisfied with the lack of inclusions in this book. Culver and Dealey are our main male characters and coupled with Kate, the vulnerable yet courageous female lead, and you have a great group to work out from.
Again this book does feel slightly dated, but being written over 20 years ago it is hardly surprising. It totally captivated me though. I loved reading about the simple day to day life that the group had to lead once they made it inside the shelter. I was intrigued by the stocks they had in there with regard to food and water, lighting and medicines. It seems boring written down like this, but Herbert has such a good writing style that you find yourself almost imagining what you would have in the shelter with you if the government had told you to prepare.
Again, he brings in lots of other characters that have a fairly in depth history behind them, panned out within the story. None of these are central to the plot but allow you to see the story unfold from lots of different viewpoints. For instance you hear about the man who built the expensive shelter in his garden, and how things turned out for him, alone with just a cat for company. Then there are the survivors of the blast, who were unable to get inside and under enough cover to avoid the radiation. Their brief life history is told whilst a longer death description is given. The hundreds of people who managed to find shelter, either in tunnels or underground cinemas for example, their stories are played out in surviving each other as well as the conditions.
And then of course you have the rats. They are a huge force to be reckoned with and feature heavily in the gore factor, but somehow they don't seem to be as big a part as in the previous two books. In The Rats and Lair, the vermin were the central bad guys and responsible for all carnage. In Domain, we also have to deal with the nuclear bombs, radiation, disease, evil human nature in the face of adversity and then it seems the rats come along and top it all off. For me this was a balance of brilliance. Whilst I enjoyed the first two books, this raised the bar that little bit more and you could feel the main characters total exasperation, fear and frustration through their actions and words.
If you like good solid descriptions of all things gross then this is a good book for you, but if you have a weaker stomach I would avoid the trilogy all together. But it is definitely a huge five stars from me.
Advantages: Gory ending to an excellent trilogy Disadvantages: Not too many new angles for being ate by a rat !!
This may have been written 5 years after the previous instalment of the trilogy but it loses none of its ability to shock. I did initially read it with some trepidation as I thought there was no way Herbert could take the story any further but as normal I was wrong, he manages to twist yet another excellent novel out of the rats saga. This time though its in the aftermath of a nuclear conflict when mankind is at his weakest and the Rats take full ... ...with Herbert throwing in scene after scene of gory mutilations ….. and you thought youd seen it all in The Rats and The Lair !!!
There is a thread of a story running through it which culminates in a final chase scene where the rats show off their ability to swim no less !! All in all a pretty good read although the actual overall theme of the book, i.e, man eating rats, does wear a little thin as you would expect in the third of a trilogy. ...
Mickm9 09.02.2001 (04.02.2001)
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: helpful Review of Domain - James Herbert
Advantages: the strong theme of reality. Disadvantages: when i came to the end
Having read the first two "rat" books, i was prepared to be averagely absorbed. However, from page one I was gripped. The book starts off within minutes of the nuclear blast which wipes out a good proportion of Britains population. Herbert sets the scene to demonstrate the effects of the blast by using several characters, whose activites go no further than to show the reader the horrific way in which they died.
He then focuses on some of the main ... ...the underground and by chance discovery of an underground bunker. It is when they venture out of the bunker that they encounter the true horror of whats left of their world, including marauding gangs and hungry, unafraid rats. The latters delight at the huge food source at their disposal poses ultimate challenges for the heroic group trying to reach safety.
This book did it for me because of the challenges the aftermath of nuclear war threw at the ...
orackle131 20.03.2006
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: helpful Review of Domain - James Herbert
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I found this book REALLY good. It was extemely real and the way it flashed through different characters made it even more life like. The image of the rats was horrific and made me abit aprehensive of finishing the read! i would definatly recommend it. ...
Rose90 01.09.2008
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Advantages: Very very gory, a real bloodstory tale Disadvantages: None
described.
It isnt just a blood and guts thing though as there is a good fast paced
story behind it which sets the scene quite well for the next 2 instalments in the Rats triology, Lair and Domain.
Interestingly JamesHerbert was inspired to write this book by a line from
a dracula movie .... "I have seen a 1000 rats with red eyes looking at me
from the lawns"
Incidentaly there was a film based on the book which was released in
1982, unbelievable as it seems I have never actually seen it (yet) but
apparently it does not do justice to the book. However until I have seen it I will reserve judgement. ...
Advantages: An azing book! A brilliant read! A must in your collection! Disadvantages: You'll never look at Rats the same again! You'll be scared to Death and never want to go into a pet shop again!
I was actually introduced to JamesHerbert by 'Domain', which was amazing.
So'Rats' was the second JamesHerbert Novel I read and although was not as good as 'Domain', was a Very Good Read.
The story as always gruesome and toe-culling, with a stomach turning sensation. I felt like I was there running with them.
So you meet the the main character Harris on chapter two after the seen has been set. He's an Art teacher at a primary school at St.Michaels. Where his first encouter is witha pupil Keogh who has a mystery bit from an attacking rat. (yeh I know its sounds silly - but you'll never look at rats the same again)
So a good book and a thrilling read that you won't be able to put down you'll be glad its such a small book but you'll never want it to end! ...
Advantages: Short Gripping Read Disadvantages: A Bit outdated and cliche'd
The Jonah is a very well written novel by JamesHerbert, though it is eclipsed by his earlier work, especially The Rats, The Lair and The Domain (The Rats Trilogy), The Jonah is a complete and engrossing book. It has dated over the years, as James' use of words and descriptive prowess has grown to such a capacity that I am waiting at his website to find out when the next book is due to be released, but this does not take anything away from it's power to hold the reader until the final page has been turned and read.
This is a story of a police officer, Kelso, whose life has been marred by accidents and deaths that he is unable to explain. When one of his collegues is killed during a shoot out, Kelso is removed from the police. He then takes a journey to find out why these things are happening to him and in the process finds love ...
The final part of the author's classic rodents trilogy, Domain sets an apocalyptic vision of earth. With the city torn apart by nuclear war, the people either dead or mutilated, a group of mutant rats prey on the weakened population.
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The writing is taut and effecive, and several stand alone scenes are magnificent. The conclusion, had it been published as a stand alone novella, would have been wonderful.
Nothing happens, and there is some nasty use of forced incest as a means to create a tawdry shock. Oh, and nothing happens. (*)