Paperback, 278 pages

Spanish language

Published Nov. 3, 2008 by Minotauro.

ISBN:
978-84-450-7690-3
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OCLC Number:
1025659532

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4 stars (2 reviews)

Unas extrañas luces verdes han aparecido en el cielo y la mayor parte de la humanidad ha alzado la mirada para contemplar el fenómeno. A la mañana siguiente todos despiertan ciegos. Las pocas personas que conservan la vista inician la lucha por sobrevivir en un mundo que se debate entre la desesperación y la barbarie.

Uno de ellos es Bill Masen, que se encuentra ingresado en el hospital, recuperándose del ataque de una planta mutante creada por el hombre: los trífidos. Se trata de enormes vegetales capaces de moverse y que han desarrollado una especie de lengua venenosa con la que agreden a los humanos. Ahora que han descubierto la debilidad de éstos, los trífidos se disponen a heredar la Tierra..., si los supervivientes no lo impiden.

40 editions

The apocalypse tells us who we really are

5 stars

Where and when you find a book will determine your view of it. For me it was 1973 on my family's little farm at Canowindra. I was ten, I loved Alfred Hitchcock's Three Investigators and the Brains Benton mysteries. My Mum and older brother were digging John Wyndham so I picked up "The Day of the Triffids", aware that it was an "adult" book, a new experience for me. I think it might have blown my tiny mind. I was like Dave Bowman, a normal human when I started, and an embryonic trans-galactic starchild by the end.

Nowadays, whether it's "Station 11", "The Last of Us" or "Sweet Tooth" the apocalypse is front of mind. But back then there was "Triffids" and George Stewart's "Earth Abides", written in 1951 and 1949 respectively. After that, there'd be a long time between (fictional) world-shattering catastrophes. These two are the ones to beat …