rcsreads's reviews
750 reviews

The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham

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slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.5

I finished reading The Day of the Triffids over the weekend and was surprised that the Triffids were basically irrelevant for 80% of the book. I did enjoy that Wyndham thought people were dumb enough to cause themselves three apocalypse level problems at the same time!
Our main character wakes up in hospital to discover that while he was recovering from surgery everyone else looked at some pretty, green meteors and went blind. He also invents a horror cliche! This is quite an exciting opening and then chapter two is just hours of incredibly boring exposition that almost made me give up on the book. But don't worry because we meet more people who can see (they're all posh, only posh people can survive the apocalypse!); fall obsessively in love with the first woman we come across; and enjoy various hijinks which mainly involve looking for supermarkets; oh and if the blindness and killer plants weren't bad enough we've got a plague too!

I can appreciate how influential this book is but it's surprisingly dull.
The Beetle by Richard Marsh

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adventurous dark mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

The Beetle was released in the same year as Dracula and outsold it at the time. I think the main reason it hasn't stayed the test of time as well is because it's massively racist. It's very much steeped in Victorian Egyptomania and post-colonial fears; and there's a lot of Orientalism and othering of anyone who's not a posh English person. The main villain is Egyptian and part of a weird cult called The Children of Isis. They like to make human sacrifices and they prefer to use white, English women. This makes zero sense as they're clearly supposed to be following an ancient Egyptian tradition and there weren't a lot of British people kicking about Egypt 3000 years ago!
It's a shame the main premise is so problematic because it was incredibly readable, a real page turner. It lays down a really good mystery at the start and there's enough peril that I needed to know what was going on. Also, the main female character is a badass and does as she pleases and makes the men treat her as an equal. They all wanted to marry her and she could have done better!
The actual Beetle is super creepy and there's a lot of people hearing the faint whirring of wings that's surprisingly scary. Also at one point it crawls onto a man's face and I'm amazed he didn't just die from it being so gross!
It's a weird tale worth reading and looking at in it's wider historical context. Obvious trigger warnings for racism and also for sexual assault.

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Rosehead by Ksenia Anske

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1.0

A brief review of one of the worst books I've ever read!

Firstly, you can't just take a dog to Germany for a week's holiday that thing would be in quarantine for months! Secondly, this book was so fatphobic. The amount of time it spent telling me how skinny and ballet dancer Lilith was compared to her fat, German relatives was horrendous especially as it's YA so the target audience really doesn't need that message. Thirdly, the writing was awful and every character a one-dimenional cliche. Fourthly she fell in love with a boy who she was blood related to with a sum total of about 4 hours interaction! Fifthly she cured him of trauma based mutism just by yelling at him during an equally traumatic event - ableist as fuck! The ADHD rep was also awful, she had hats and used big words - yup definitely the only symptoms of neurodiversity!
Uncle Silas: A Tale of Bartram-Haugh by J. Sheridan Le Fanu

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dark mysterious slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.5

The villains of this tale are annoyingly inept. I'd quite like a retelling from Uncle Silas' perspective because he's just off his face on opiates the whole time while all his lackeys are failing to achieve anything but faintly irritating Maud!

As in all classic gothic novels, our heroine, Maud, goes to live in a big, spooky house and people attempt to marry her against her wishes. There's a distinct lack of scenery chat though, which is probably an improvement on the genre. The book is still about twice as long as it needs to be though! We get all the Radcliffe references of Northanger Abbey but without any of the humour. It was readable and had enough little mysteries to keep me interested.

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