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The Day of the Triffids
The Day of the Triffids
Nov 21, 2025 1:31 PM

Author:John Wyndham

The Day of the Triffids

FROM THE CLASSIC SCI-FI WRITER AND AUTHOR OF THE CHRYSTALIDS

When a freak cosmic event renders most of the Earth's population blind, Bill Masen is one of the lucky few to retain his sight. The London he walks is crammed with groups of men and women needing help, some ready to prey on those who can still see. But another menace stalks blind and sighted alike. With nobody to stop their spread the Triffids, mobile plants with lethal stingers and carnivorous appetites, seem set to take control.

The Day of the Triffids is perhaps the most famous catastrophe novel of the twentieth century and its startling imagery of desolate streets and lurching, lethal plant life retains its power to haunt today.

'One of those books that haunts you for the rest of your life' Sunday Times

'I had forgotten just how real this 1951 classic seems - and am impressed by how eerily relevant it now appears' The Observer

'Remains fresh and disturbing in an entirely unexpected way' The Guardian

Reviews

One of those books that haunts you for the rest of your life

—— Sunday Times

Has captivated readers for over half a century

—— Guardian

For more than 20 years now, Robert Edric's inflinching eye for human cruelty has roamed across centuries and continents

—— Sunday Times Culture Magazine

Subtle, absorbing novel of poetry, madness and post-war trauma

—— Sunday Times

[Edric's] prose has an impressive emotional weight

—— Andrew Motion, Poet Laureate , Guardian

A fiction of extraordinary resonance, a text of secret harmonies, upper partials and complex internal logic, executed in prose of beautiful, foreboding plainness. In Zodiac Light is a remarkable, serious, accomplished novel and Edric an author absolutely secure in the originality of his own voice

—— The Times

Deeply moving...Edric accomplishes much with this thoughtful, subtle and moving novel...Above all, he allows us to understand a little more clearly how fragile are the borders of sanity, and how blurred they can become

—— Yorkshire Evening Post

The novel's delicate counterpoint of psychiatrist and war-damaged poet invites comparison with Pat Barker's Regeneration...Edric is a virtuoso of atmospheric settings

—— London Review of Books

His language is precise and compressed, each word invested with a world of meaning. An uneasy, thought-provoking work which stays with you long after you have finished reading it.

—— Historical Novels Review

With its shifting, subtle light this is a potent exercise in fictional recuperation

—— Sunday Times

Full...of symbols of oppression and human anonymity, In Zodiac Light is a sound evocation of an artist tragically divorced from his calling

—— Telegraph

This book reinforces the status of the prolific Edric as one of English fiction's best-kept secrets

—— Glasgow Herald

Edric succeeds in painting an atmospheric dystopia that is at once unsettling and frightening and laudable for its skilful evocation of the doom and the despair

—— Irish Examiner

Without pretension or crusading auto-didacticism he has spent a quarter of a century creating a fantasy worl that does its bit to make this world a better place. It is a splendid achievement.

—— Deborah Orr , The Independent

This is Pratchett operating at the peak of his powers. Nation's often very funny, the characters are adorable, the plot intriguing... Nation is wryly hilarious throughout.

—— DeathRay

It's a wonderful story, by turns harrowing and triumphant, and Mau and Daphne are tremendously appealing characters. It's a book that can be read with great pleasure by young readers-and not a few of their parents, I suspect-as both a high-spirited yarn and a subtle examination of the risks and virtues of faith.

—— The New York Times

Gr 7-10-A tsunami has hit Mau's island home and washed away everyone he has known. Daphne is from the other side of the globe and is the sole survivor (or so she thinks) of a shipwreck on the island. The two come together and each of them brings wisdom, intelligence, and sense of humanity to their dire situation. An absorbing novel of survival and discovery liberally infused with Pratchett's trademark wit.

—— The School Library Journal

This culture clash comedy gives way to growing understanding and there is much to ponder on the merits of faith and tradition.

—— Wolverhampton Chronicle

... a unique, exhilarating tour de force

—— School Librarian

... a very funny and well-written story. The characters and plot are both imaginative and thought-provoking.

—— Calum Turner, Lochgilphead High , Teen Titles

A South Seas island adventure with an assured comic edge from Pratchett... This culture clash comedy gives way to growing understanding and there is much to ponder on the merits of faith and tradition.

—— Wolverhampton Chronicle

I think this is - just possibly -the best book Pratchett has ever written.

—— Michelle West , Fantasy and Science Fiction

This is a novel for all ages from (say) 11 to (say) 90, and its narrative exuberance will lure its younger readers to 'strange seas of thought'.

—— School Library Association

Pratchett writing at the height of his powers.

—— Carousel

A serious work, but one written with humour and a lightness of touch that embraces big questions...it is a book about the faith of our times.

—— INIS

Terry Pratchett's use of language here is funny and exciting. This book delivers adventure, philosophy and satire. Pratchett has written of a very different world from his Discworld series. This is one of the cleverest novels I have read in years.

—— Newsademic.com

Nation is a modern tale of enlightenment that can be enjoyed by teenagers and aduls alike. An exceptional read, highly recommended.

—— Joesphine Brady , Classroom (NATE)

An ebullient and entertaining novel of ideas.

—— Julia Eccleshare , The Guardian

Nation, published in 2008 (this year's award catchment runs from August 2008-September 2009), is an extraordinarily complicated tale about God, tradition and loss. Yet it is told with beautiful simplicity and rollicking readability.

—— Andrew Johnson , The Independent

Funny and profound, Nation is much more than an adventure story, pitting reason against religion and offering an alternative perspective on world history and culture.

—— Time Out

As Pratchett says: "Thinking. This book contains some. Whether you try it at home is up to you." His wit is on every page; his world surpasses ours, his writing is weird and wonderful. No, weirdly wonderful. It is gripping but put the book down to ponder the thoughts inside to unearth a parallel universe. Terry Pratchett is worth more than his idiom; his teachings contain more philosophical thought than I would have ever thought possible.

—— Sian Reilly (aged 13) , Sunday Express
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