
Domain
The Rats Series, Book 3
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Narrated by:
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David Rintoul
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By:
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James Herbert
Book Three in Herbert’s classic ‘rats’ series. The final countdown. The long-dreaded nuclear conflict. The city torn apart, shattered, its people destroyed or mutilated beyond hope. For just a few, survival is possible only beneath the wrecked streets - if there is time to avoid the slow-descending poisonous ashes. But below, the rats, demonic offspring of irradiated forebears, are waiting. They know that Man is weakened, become frail. Man has become their prey.
James Herbert was one of Britain’s greatest popular novelists and our #1 best-selling writer of chiller fiction. Widely imitated and hugely influential, he wrote 23 novels which have collectively sold over 54 million copies worldwide and been translated into 34 languages.
Born in London in the forties, James Herbert was art director of an advertising agency before turning to writing fiction in 1975. His first novel, The Rats, was an instant bestseller and is now recognised as a classic of popular contemporary fiction.
Herbert went on to publish a new top ten best-seller every year until 1988. He wrote six more bestselling novels in the 1990s and three more since: Once, Nobody True and The Secret of Crickley Hall.
Herbert died in March 2013 at the age of 69.
©1984 James Herbert (P)2013 Audible LtdListeners also enjoyed...




















Editorial reviews
Imagine: the scrabble of little claws, the cold slither of hairless tails.… That is just part of the terror of James Herbert's third book in the chilling Rats Series. Domain imagines a horrible post-apocalyptic world in which humans must compete with rats to survive the nuclear holocaust. David Rintoul's performance is truly disturbing in the best ways! Rintoul is able to ratchet up the suspense in Herbert's novel until it almost feels as if the rats are right below you!
Critic reviews
"There are few things I would like to do less than lie under a cloudy night sky while someone read aloud the more vivid passages of Moon. In the thriller genre, do recommendations come any higher?" (Andrew Postman, The New York Times Book Review)
"Herbert goes out in a blaze of glory" ( Daily Mail)
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This is 1970's style horror story telling at its best.
Read excitedly by David Rintoul.
A fitting end to a great trilogy!
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When Fall Out Has Teeth
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But despite being nearly as long as both of the previous books combined, it probably has less than half of the rat content of either of those books on their own.
I wouldn't want to discourage anyone who liked other books by this author, but I do have to say, as somebody who never thought they wanted to read a horror novel about rats, or its sequel, that by the time I got to the last in the trilogy, I was really counting on tons of rats.
And there ARE tons of rats, but still...
There's so much in the book that isn't rats, that by the time the book is SERIOUSLY about rats, I barely cared anymore!
Maybe that was the point, to close this series by winding down the readers' interest in the nuclear rats of this nuclear rat fictional universe.
All I know is that the next time I want to read a book that's REALLY about RATS, I'll stick with The Rats or Lair!!!
Not enough rats
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the narrator
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Not what I exerted for the final chapter.
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The final 'Rats' book - with no Rats
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