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Mass Market Paperback Lair Book

ISBN: 0451165640

ISBN13: 9780451165640

Lair

(Book #2 in the Rats Series)

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Recommended

Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$15.99
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Book Overview

"Not for the nervous." --Daily Mirror The mutant white rat had grown and mated, creating offspring in its own image. They dominated the others, the dark-furred ones, who foraged for food and brought... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Excellent

Lair, the second book in The Rats trilogy, is possibly even better and more brutal than The Rats. The Black Rats are back and this time attacking the area around Epping Forest just outside of London. After a series of gruesome attacks, Pender, our protagonist, who works at Ratkill (self-explanitory) is sent to investigate and discovers that the Black Rat is back. Of couse, the local authorities dont belive him and he is left to try and fight against by the rats by himself - along with the obligatory love interest - as more and more people are attacked and killed. Very suspenceful and gorey. I read most of it in one go because it is very difficult to put down. Great sequel to The Rats.

lair

good condition. follow up to the rats. leaves you fearful of rodents and the possibility of an intelligent rodent

The Weakest???

I read this several years ago, but never read the other two in the series that some other reviewer spoke of. I don't think I'd want to because even though I've never had a foundness of rats I got extremely leary of them after reading this book. It's been a long time so I don't recall the entire story, but it centers on some mutant rats. They were from some island that had nuclear testing. They somehow got in the feight of some ship and either made it to America of Britian. Once there they bred with the common local rats and produced highbred rats that were under the control of a lead rat with intelligence. They'd form packs and attack humans. I think this was an effort to wipe out humans so that the rat would becpme the top of the food chain. What made this even scarier was that these highbred rats would grow to the size of a house cat. The idea of a pack of house cat sized rats taking after a person was pretty damn troubling because James Herbert has a style of bringing the reader from one set of sespence to another until you almost start to feel worn out by just reading.... If you like a good scare, then this is plenty scary. As for his other books about rats that are in this genre.... I read this in the late 1980's and I still have no desire to take that trip again on either of the other two. Especially if others consider this the weakest of the series...

Rats 2 delivers the gruesome goods.

The only thing connecting this novel to the previous entry, as well as the one that followed it, are the rats themselves. Here they have escaped to a wooded area that surrounds London and are gulping down campers and hikers as well as rural townfolk. Herbert's vignette laced narrative is a deceptive breeze to read, for it makes the blood curdling attacks, of which there are quite a few, all the more effective. Animal attack fans should need no encouraging to hunt this down, but others will find something to enjoy as well. Recommended.

Pleasantly Surprised About This Great Suspense Story

For those of you who don't know the order of the Rats trilogy already, let me go ahead and get that out of the way first. It starts off with Rats, then Lair, and finally concludes with Domain. All are great books but I must admit when I started Lair I wasn't ready to give it the credit it deserved. It was a sort of neglected middle child out of the "Rats" family. The first book, Rats, sets up the plot for the entire trilogy, as would be expected and while the premise by itself (people being mutilated and killed by giant mutant rats) seems like something out of a 50's B Horror movie, Herbert actually manages to pull it off, due probably more to his skill as a writer than anything else. And this was when he was an up and coming writer. Reading his later works one can see how much he has evolved [kind of like his rats :):)]. Rats was the starting point and was pretty interesting in and of itself, while Domain was a straight home run out of the park. When I started Lair, with the knowledge of what was to come in Domain, I read it mainly so I could get to Domain, kind of how you drive through Jersey so you can get to New York. But I guess the surprise was on me because I actually really enjoyed reading the book. The rats come back and in full force, except instead of being in the London docks they are in Epping Forest, an outskirt of London. The no nonsense, tough as nails hero with a vendetta in this book is Luke Pender (although if you like Pender you'll really like Captain Mather, a sort of British John Wayne). Pender works for Ratkill, the extermination agency that helped stop the London outbreak four years earlier. People looking for recurring characters might be disappointed (although not surprised since many of the main characters in Rats either got terribly mauled or killed) as the only one we get is Stephen Howard, a grunt in the original Rats novel, but now the big cheese at Ratkill in Lair. The book is action packed with lots of rat attacks, as would be expected, the usual gratuitous sex scenes one always expects from Herbert (just joking Mr. Herbert) and a great finale worthy of the House of Usher. This book can be thought of as an extension of the first book, Rats. One could read Lair in and of itself but it would make more sense if they read Rats first then Lair, as it involves the reader more in the story. Yes, the book has some predictable scenes. One sometimes wants to shout "Don't go in there" but Herbert's prose does make up for any misses. For richness of plot you might want to turn to Harlan Ellison or Ray Bradbury, but if you like smooth prose that floats off the mind like a fine wine as well as a riveting action adventure novel then give Herbert a try. (And don't forget to read the other two books in the trilogy).
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