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Domain
Domain
Domain
Audiobook (abridged)2 hours

Domain

Written by James Herbert

Narrated by Steven Pacey

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this audiobook

The long-dreaded nuclear conflict. The city torn apart, shattered, its people destroyed or mutilated beyond hope. For just a few, survival is possible only beneath the wrecked streets - if there is time to avoid the slow-descending poisonous ashes. But below, the rats, demonic offspring of irradiated forebears, are waiting. They know that Man is weakened, become frail. Has become their prey... REMEMBER WITH FEAR
LanguageEnglish
PublisherPan Macmillan
Release dateMay 4, 2007
ISBN9780230701489
Author

James Herbert

James Herbert was not only Britain’s number one bestselling writer of chiller fiction, a position he held ever since publication of his first novel, but was also one of our greatest popular novelists. Widely imitated and hugely influential, his twenty-three novels have sold more than fifty-four million copies worldwide, and have been translated into over thirty languages, including Russian and Chinese. In 2010, he was made the Grand Master of Horror by the World Horror Convention and was also awarded an OBE by the Queen for services to literature. His final novel was Ash. James Herbert died in March 2013.

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Reviews for Domain

Rating: 3.713815789473684 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

152 ratings5 reviews

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Excellent end to the trilogy. Brought back loads of memories.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Five nuclear bombs explode above. The mutant black rats swarm below. And the English people who survived the bombs, may have only done so to be meals for vermin!Decent premise, but not the "Rats" sequel I wanted. This one is mostly about surviving the nuclear holocaust, with just a little bit of the rats thrown in at the end. I just wanted to read about the rats from the first two books. So I didn't really like this book. Boo. If you liked the first two books, like I did, skip this one.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    "The man-made caverns shuddered but resisted the unleashed pressure from the world above. Sections collapsed, others were flooded, but the main body of tunnels withstood the impacts that pounded the city. And after a while, the silence returned.Save for the scurrying of many, many clawed feet."So, the first book in the series, The Rats, dealt with a plague of giant black rats with a taste for blood, rampaging through London. The second, Lair placed the descendants of these rats, four years later, in Epping Forest, with a similar outcome. Domain is rather different; it opens with a devastating nuclear strike on London that shatters the city, kills most of the population and drives the survivors underground out of the reach of the nuclear fallout that follows. Meanwhile, in the tunnels under the city, those pesky giant rats have been hiding, multiplying and biding their time... Our hero this time around is a rugged helicopter pilot called Steve Culver. He drags a stranger - a man named Alex Dealey, who just happens to be a government agent - out of harm's way during the strike, and en route to the official shelter Dealey knows to be nearby, also saves a young woman, Kate, from the earliest ratty carnage in the tunnels of the London Underground. Naturally, she and Steve develop an interest in each other, and Dealey's connections prove helpful... so far so obvious. What I wasn't expecting was for the focus to be so political. It's quite a departure from the previous formula of 'unsuspecting person attacked - another unsuspecting person attacked - escalating carnage - investigation - crisis - resolution'. In fact, given the whole 'nuclear holocaust' thing, the rats are fairly low down on the characters' list of problems, at least until much closer to the end. A lot of the plot is given over to the ramifications of the attack - avoiding the nuclear fallout, government provision for survival, scoping out the remains of the city, attempting to communicate with other official shelters across London - rather than to the ratty menace. Of course, as the novel goes on the rats' presence definitely increases. A horrific scene inside the government shelter (one of those where you literally can't imagine how it can end well for ANYBODY) paves the way for a group of survivors to return to the surface, where there is more scope for interaction with other people as well as encounters with the rats. From this point the pace is much quicker, the chapters more brutal, and the double climax arrives with a satisfying dose of adrenaline-fuelled horror. Although I'm not a huge fan of political thrillers and relentlessly bleak adventure stories, I enjoyed this trilogy finale, mostly because of the dystopian premise and the closer focus on a larger cast of key characters than Herbert perhaps felt the need to offer in the previous two installments. I did think at times that a glimmer of hope might have been nice - there were moments when it felt like I was reading my way through a nightmare. One of those where you KNOW there's no way out and no matter how hard you try the predators are going to get you in the end. Mentally I occasionally wanted to do the inevitable 'give up, turn and face the bad guys, then at least I can wake up' thing. Buuuut I kept going, because unlike a nightmare, the end was going to come eventually, and I wanted to know how the hell this little group were going to defeat the rats, and what had become of England on a wider scale after London was destroyed... I'm glad I finished up the series, even if this third book was a bit of a departure from the previous two!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Enjoyable end to the trilogy, not quite as good as the first two books.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    It is well-writen but I couldn't keep reading of rats attacks.