An edition of The Day of the Triffids (1951)

The day of the triffids

  • 4.1 (32 ratings) ·
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The day of the triffids
John Wyndham, Marcel Battin, C ...
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  • 4.1 (32 ratings) ·
  • 156 Want to read
  • 5 Currently reading
  • 56 Have read

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Last edited by WorkBot
April 26, 2011 | History
An edition of The Day of the Triffids (1951)

The day of the triffids

  • 4.1 (32 ratings) ·
  • 156 Want to read
  • 5 Currently reading
  • 56 Have read

When Bill Masen wakes up blindfolded in hospital there is a bitter irony in his situation. Carefully removing his bandages, he realizes that he is the only person who can see: everyone else, doctors and patients alike, have been blinded by a meteor shower. Now, with civilization in chaos, the triffids - huge, venomous, large-rooted plants able to 'walk', feeding on human flesh - can have their day.The Day of the Triffids, published in 1951, expresses many of the political concerns of its time: the Cold War, the fear of biological experimentation and the man-made apocalypse. However, with its terrifyingly believable insights into the genetic modification of plants, the book is more relevant today than ever before.

Comment by Liz Jensen on The Guardian:

As a teenager, one of my favourite haunts was Oxford's Botanical Gardens. I'd head straight for the vast heated greenhouses, where I'd pity my adolescent plight, chain-smoke, and glory in the insane vegetation that burgeoned there. The more rampant, brutally spiked, poisonous, or cruel to insects a plant was, the more it appealed to me. I'd shove my butts into their root systems. They could take it. My librarian mother disapproved mightily of the fags but when under interrogation I confessed where I'd been hanging out – hardly Sodom and Gomorrah – she spotted a literary opportunity, and slid John Wyndham's The Day of the Triffids my way. I read it in one sitting, fizzing with the excitement of recognition. I knew the triffids already: I'd spent long hours in the jungle with them, exchanging gases. Wyndham loved to address the question that triggers every invented world: the great "What if . . ." What if a carnivorous, travelling, communicating, poison-spitting oil-rich plant, harvested in Britain as biofuel, broke loose after a mysterious "comet-shower" blinded most of the population? That's the scenario faced by triffid-expert Bill Masen, who finds himself a sighted man in a sightless nation. Cataclysmic change established, cue a magnificent chain reaction of experimental science, physical and political crisis, moral dilemmas, new hierarchies, and hints of a new world order. Although the repercussions of an unprecedented crisis and Masen's personal journey through the new wilderness form the backbone of the story, it's the triffids that root themselves most firmly in the reader's memory. Wyndham described them botanically, but he left enough room for the reader's imagination to take over. The result being that everyone who reads The Day of the Triffids creates, in their mind's eye, their own version of fiction's most iconic plant. Mine germinated in an Oxford greenhouse, in a cloud of cigarette smoke.

Publish Date
Publisher
Fawcett
Language
English
Pages
191

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Previews available in: English Russian

Edition Availability
Cover of: The Day of the Triffids (Penguin Essentials)
The Day of the Triffids (Penguin Essentials)
Sep 30, 2014, Viking
mass market paperback
Cover of: The day of the triffids
The day of the triffids
2003, Modern Library
in English - 2003 Modern Library pbk. ed.
Cover of: Denʹ triffidov
Denʹ triffidov: [sb. fantast. romanov]
2003, AST, 2002.
in Russian
Cover of: The Day of the Triffids
The Day of the Triffids
July 1993, Carroll & Graf Pub
Paperback in English
Cover of: Day of the Triffids
Day of the Triffids
December 12, 1985, Del Rey, Ballantine Books
Mass Market Paperback in English
Cover of: The day of the triffids
The day of the triffids
1973, Michael Joseph
in English
Cover of: The day of the triffids
The day of the triffids
1954, Penguin Books in association with Michael Joseph
in English
Cover of: The day of the triffids
The day of the triffids
1951, Fawcett
in English
Cover of: The day of the triffids
The day of the triffids
1951, Doubleday
in English - 1st ed.]

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Published in
Greenwich, Conn
Series
A Fawcett Crest book

The Physical Object

Pagination
191 p. ;
Number of pages
191

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL14469526M
OCLC/WorldCat
2762622

Source records

Oregon Libraries MARC record

First Sentence

"When a day that you happen to know is Wednesday starts off by sounding like Sunday, there is something seriously wrong somewhere."

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History

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April 26, 2011 Edited by WorkBot merge works
August 18, 2010 Edited by WorkBot merge works
December 15, 2009 Edited by WorkBot link works
April 20, 2009 Edited by ImportBot add OCLC number
September 12, 2008 Created by ImportBot Imported from Oregon Libraries MARC record