Horror Aficionados discussion

This topic is about
The Rats
Buddy Reads
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The Rats - James Herbert

I read this book and the other two in the trilogy last year. I’ll be watching your comments. Hope you all enjoy!


I remember you reading this last year! Yeah, I'm looking forward to some rat action next month. :D I haven't read a horror creature book in awhile.
I read this book ages ago. Although the subject matter is great, the story itself is in no way some of Herbert's best work. He got much better once he had a couple books under his belt.
I read this book ages ago. Although the subject matter is great, the story itself is in no way some of Herbert's best work. He got much better once he had a couple books under his belt.

Willard, I believe, was based on the book Ratman's Notebooks. I have that book also, but haven’t read it yet. I’d join for that one!

I remember you reading this last year! Yeah, I'm looking forward to ..."
Yeah, I’m a big fan of creature features myself!


Awesome - You have the best library of horror books!

You lucky girl


I would like to join - first time reading James Herbert - I have Others in my to read list and it seems Haunted has a lot supporters for the April Read Nomination in the HA group here.
Saw your post and The Rats jumped straight to number one position in my list...
Glad to have you aboard, Rhonda and Andres. What started as an effort to whittle some of my massive TBR pile down has picked up steam to be a decent size Buddy Read.
Some people may grumble that Rats isn't Herbert's best offering. Others will argue the opposite. I honestly don't care. Herbert is a great author and this is his classic story that put his name on the map and spawned 3 sequels. I'm fired up to read it!
Some people may grumble that Rats isn't Herbert's best offering. Others will argue the opposite. I honestly don't care. Herbert is a great author and this is his classic story that put his name on the map and spawned 3 sequels. I'm fired up to read it!


Awesome Marie-Helene! We go from the arctic slog to cute furry creatures. ;) hahaha

I can see a pattern, going from the Norway rats of HMS Terror to the London rats.

Ha!! I see the pattern as well. :D
Marie-Helene wrote: "I'd like to join?"
Absolutely, Jacob and Marie-Helene. Looking forward to it. Rats are such nasty creatures. It's a wonder there aren't more horror tropes where rats are the stars.
Absolutely, Jacob and Marie-Helene. Looking forward to it. Rats are such nasty creatures. It's a wonder there aren't more horror tropes where rats are the stars.
I was thinking that the 1970s loved their animals going nuts stories, everything from Jaws, The Rats, and movies like Grizzly, Pirahna, Orca, Food of the Gods, etc.

That's so true Ken! You don't see those types of movies now and that makes me a bit sad. I love animal horror flicks!

I understand 'The rats' is the first book of a trilogy.
I've got a feeling April is going to be Pest Control month 🤤

I understand 'The rats' is the first book of a trilogy.
I've got a feeling April is going to be Pest Control month 🤤"
Yes, it is :)
I hope to read the whole trilogy soon but am not sure if I can make it in April. So many books to read, as always. But maybe... who knows :)
I still don't feel comfortable with rats... I haven't read or watched too much creature horror. I don't know what it is... I can read/watch the most brutal and gory stuff... but rats or monsters... hmm.. that's hard for me :D

You don't like rats, neither do I. But mice are so adorable 😍
I have an 'Introduction to Language' to read, so Franck Herbert will the perfect balance.
Squeak squeak 🐭

Spring is the perfect time for furry critters to come out and play! ;) hahaha

You don't like rats, neither do I. But mice are so adorable 😍
I have an 'Introduction to Language' to read, so Franck Herbert will the perfect b..."
Oh, Introduction to Language sounds good. I hope you like it. I love language... but then, I'm studying and working as a linguist, so I am a bit biased on that I guess :D

32% in and loving it!
Vintage horror, swinging London, fun frightfest
Who's afraid of 🐀🐀🐀🐀🐀🐀🐀???
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fUPAF...
I'm starting this one tomorrow night. I can't wait to get into it and discuss. Rats are so damn nasty!


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fUPAF..."
Definitely going to have to watch this after the book. Awesome!

Glad I joined this BR!

👍
Yes

I liked that chapter very much. (view spoiler)
This is just my second James Herbert book, but I have to say I see a certain pattern... (view spoiler)

I liked that chapter very much."
Just curious, Feli, what was the other James Herbert book?

I liked that chapter very much."
Just curious, Feli, what was the other James Herbert book?"
It was The Fog and also my first 'group read' here on GR (although it turned out that just Latasha and me were reading it, haha).
[Off topic fun fact: when I entered 'The Fog Herbert' for the link above, it was just the second book GR showed me... The first one was Romeo & Juliet by Shakespeare.. 🤔]

I liked that chapter very much."
Just curious, Feli, what was the other James Herbert book?"
It was [book:The ..."
I wondered if it had been The Fog or The Dark. They really do have a similar feel to this one, I thought also.
And yes, more amazing Goodreads intuition I see, lol!
Feli wrote: "Ginger wrote: "Just finished up Ch5. [spoilers removed]"
I liked that chapter very much. [spoilers removed]
This is just my second James Herbert book, but I have to say I see a certain pattern......"
I've often noticed weak female characters from stories from the 1970s. At first, I thought it was just one author and dismissed it as him being a chauvenistic prick, but then the more work from this era that I read, I found that it was quite common. Authors like Charles L Grant, J.N. Williamson, John Farris and others were quite guilty of this.
I liked that chapter very much. [spoilers removed]
This is just my second James Herbert book, but I have to say I see a certain pattern......"
I've often noticed weak female characters from stories from the 1970s. At first, I thought it was just one author and dismissed it as him being a chauvenistic prick, but then the more work from this era that I read, I found that it was quite common. Authors like Charles L Grant, J.N. Williamson, John Farris and others were quite guilty of this.

[spoilers removed]"
Exactly! I'm curious (view spoiler)


The Underground train :::
Monday morning rush :::
Recipe for disaster, of course
Well, (view spoiler)

I liked that chapter very much. [spoilers removed]
This is just my second James Herbert book, but I have to say I see a certa..."
Agree, I also felt several comments were skewed, not only towards a strong skillful male character but there were also comments about "dark-skinned" people and wondering about one of the characters "being queer". I guess that is the way they wrote back then?. I don't think those comments add a thing to the whole plot.
I just finished it. Short but I went through it fairly quickly so I take that as a good sign. Always wanted to know what was coming next.
(view spoiler)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Fog (other topics)Ratman's Notebooks (other topics)
Ken
Addy
Feli
Ginger
Joe
Rhonda
Andres
Jacob
Marie-Helene
Anyone else?