The Day of the Triffids

The Day of the Triffids

3.95 of 5 stars 3.95  ·  rating details  ·  27,302 ratings  ·  959 reviews
What were they--

These hideous triffids roaming the ruins of the earth?

Until a few short hours ago--before the sky exploded into a shower of flaming green hell--triffids had been regarded as merely a curious and profitable form of plant life. Now these shadowy vegetable creatures became a crawling, killing nightmare of pain and horror.

Madness hung in the air, fear lurked in...more
Mass Market Paperback, #T1322, 191 pages
Published April 1970 by Fawcett Publications (first published 1951)
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Richard
This review can now be found at Expendable Mudge Muses Aloud!
Megan Baxter
For some reason, I had the impression that Day of the Triffids was about the sudden attack of man-killing mobile plants. So I was surprised when it was revealed that the triffids had been around for a long time and a worldwide case of blindness was the cause of the catastrophe - the triffids merely took advantage of it.

For the main character, laid up in hospital with his eyes bandaged, he missed the spectacular meteor shower that seems to have caused the problem, and is one of the few who can st...more
Dan Schwent
Aug 15, 2008 Dan Schwent rated it 4 of 5 stars Recommends it for: fans of survival horror and early sf
Shelves: early-sf
Everything seemed fine with the domesticated Triffids until the Earth passed through the tail of a comet, blinding much of the world's population. It was then the Triffids struck!

I love the proto-sf of the first half of the 20th century, when the lines between sf and horror were more blurred than they are now. Day of the Triffids is one of those books that many things that came later owe a debt to. The roots of the survival horror genre can be found within its pages, in my opinion. Many zombie f...more
Stephen
4.0 stars. I am very glad that I finally got around to reading this classic post-apocalyptic novel. I really liked Wyndham's writing style and the way he presented the story. It was well written, well plotted and kept me interested throughout the book. As with most really good post-apocalyptic science fiction novels, the true point of the story is the exploration of human nature by showing how different people act when the society they have grown up in falls apart. Recommended!!!
Jessica
Wyndham is an engaging writer but this is pretty silly stuff. Well, I could handle the comet or satellite-induced blindness and even the triffids, these walking carnivorous stinging murderous plants...but I wasn't prepared for this as a romance novel as well. More fantasy. The heroics of our hero got to me. Written in 1951, it is in some ways like a 19th century novel. I'd have liked more focus on the breakdown of society and formation of new ones...well, that is here to some extent, but in the...more
I, Curmudgeon
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Mark
Read this for the first time years ago, must have been when I was about 15 but suddenly thought I would post a few Wyndham reviews whilst eating my lunch cos he is a brilliant writer; although John Wyndham and a comfortably swallowed lunch probably are not the best of bedfellows. The story in some ways is of a skewed natural world in all its many guises rising up and seeking revenge. Whether it be, initially, the comet shower which most people go out to gaze upon and are then blinded by its affe...more
Penny
When I was about 14, I read my father's old Penguin classic copy -- a bright orange paperback from the 1950s. And absolutely loved it. I've read it countless times since, and is one of the books I think about most. Officially my favorite book.

Having said that -- it has no literary pretensions, most characters are fairly one dimensional, and the triffids themselves (walking, thinking, carnivorous plants) I have always thought of as a rather annoying distraction. What gripped me, and grips me sti...more
Bill
The Day of the Triffids had such a great and promising start to it. A man wakes up in a hospital only to realize that he has been spared from a cataclysmic meteor shower that has left most of the remaining
population either dead or blind.
Somehow, this has something to do with the Triffids, a bizarre plant whose origins are a mystery. As the story progresses, more facts and history of the Triffids unfold to reveal sinister characteristics.

Unfortunately for me, my interest began to wane halfway thr...more
Elliott
The Day of the Triffids is representative of a certain type of Cold War English novel. It goes like this: England is the last bastion of politesse and moral rectitude in a world awash in Communism and licentiousness. I'm sure there are similar narratives in the Cold War literature of other countries but it always strikes me as a distinctly English point of view. In these novels, the hero is the quintessential Englishman: "Dash it all, woman, you've got no sense! Miraculous how I can drink such l...more
Chris
I have a long fondness for Apocalyptic novels. The Stand was one of my early favorites from junior high school, and I really enjoyed its cousin by Robert McCammon, Swan Song. There's something about the End Of The World that just grabs me and won't let go. Maybe it's the thought that, should the world end, I would be one of the survivors. The rule of law would break down, all shackles of modern life would be loosed, and I would finally be free to choose my own destiny. Which, knowing me, would p...more
Cagney
I don't know what my deal is with these post-apocalyptic yarns. This one is very insightful, but less theoretical and obtuse than The Road. I gave The Road a higher rating though because there are still moments and excerpts of it that cross my mind from time to time. And, although while I was reading Triffids I thought, "I think I like this one better," I ended up forgetting much about it by the time I was done. Perhaps, because it is plot driven and plot intricacies are often lost when they are...more
Andreea Daia
Maybe it's our jaded senses cause by the continuously bombardment by the television with death, gore, and violence... Maybe it's Wyndham's rather detached, impersonal, deadpan depiction of pain and sorrow... Or maybe (and this is I believe much of the cause) it is the author's deliberately attempted to portray a beginning rather than an end. Either way, while reading The Day of the Triffids I never felt daunted or shocked, let alone horrified of this version of apocalypse.

While he could have foc...more
Ubik
WOW! This was so absolutely amazing and not what I thought it was going to be. I avoided it for years thinking it was "killer plants taking over the world 50s B-movie style" but I was fnugging WRONG. If ever there was a piece of literature (or any other media for that matter) that so understated yet made so believable such an at-first-glance ridiculous premise, it is this novel. The characterizations were wonderful. I really knew Bill, Coker, and Josella right off the bat in fewer words without...more
Raegan Butcher
Jul 16, 2008 Raegan Butcher rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: horticulturalists
First read this in the sixth grade and it has always been a rather fondly recalled experience.I'm a sucker for good first lines and Day of the Triffids has one of the best in the sci fi genre, right up there with the opening lines of I Am Legend.
"When a day that you happen to know is Wednesday starts off by sounding like Sunday, there is something seriously wrong somewhere."
Gabriel
Jun 02, 2007 Gabriel rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: everyone interested in what makes people tick
The scariest part of this book is not the man-eating plants, but the surrounding circumstances. John Wyndham (whose novels have only impressed me) knows the focus of his book lies in dealing with the destruction of a society based on sight, not on the attack of the plants, and this raises the level of what could have been just a B Movie book to classic status.
John
Probably doesn't deserve a five star rating but I loved it. Fans of zombie/post-apocalyptic fiction should enjoy. There was a great BBC mini-series based on this book made during the seventies I think.
Oscar
Okay, this post-apocalyptic novel turned out to be not what I expected. Judging by the name of the book, and after reading its back cover teaser, I was expecting it to be centred on triffids slowly taking over the world. That is to say, huge, venomous, walking plants eating people left and right. But triffids, in spite of their scary physical appearance and even scarier displays of intelligence, do not play as big a role in the story as themes such as the universality of morals (whatever that is...more
^
Mar 26, 2013 ^ rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Lovers of classic science fiction
The BBC TV adaptation of “The Day of the Triffids” has remained at the back of my mind for many years now. It was only relatively recently that I found a half-decent ‘pre-owned’ (several owners I should imagine) Penguin edition (I just so LOVE the cover art) of John Wyndham’s book, at an all too tempting price in a charity (thrift) shop. It dawned on me that here was a text I’d not read before.

Six months later, reminded by the recent Chelyabinsk meteorite (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/artic....more
Simon
You know, I was going to give this a two, but it really started to grow on me.

I'm still not sure it deserves its status as 'classic SF', unless it is as an example of one of the first of the 'post-apocalyptic' sub-genre. It's definitely readable, but something about the whole nature of the catastrophe doesn't really ring true-- as a recent documentary observed, it's a very middle class sort of apocalypse.

The worst, or most jarring, part of it is the highly dubious display of sexual poitics, mo...more
Katie
"It is that those of us that start on this task will all have their parts to play. The men must work. The women must have babies. Unless you can agree to that, there can be no place for you in our community."

Remind me when the end of the world comes to hold up in a Sam's Club and shoot anything with a cock that comes near me.

The amusing thing is that the women aren't mortified by the idea of forced breeding, but the abolition of *gasp* the marriage law! Good old 1950s sexism.

Josella said, "If yo...more
Petra
I think I liked this story more now than the first time I read it.
John Wyndham sci-fi stories are the perfect post-apocolyptic stories. His characters are real, the situations they find themselves in are real (or would be real if they happened), there's always a strange "something" to give a twist (in this case, the Triffids). Always, Wyndham's books are hopeful, giving the humans who survive the opportunity to rebuild.
Now I want to reread the rest of Wyndham's books!
Debra
Stephen King recommended author as his "favorite in the field" (science fiction) mentioned in Chapter 2 of the Berkley's 1983 paperback edition of Danse Macabre.


This book noted as "important to the genre we have been discussing" from Danse Macabre, published in 1981.

I can't believe I managed to miss this one when I was growing up. I don't even remember seeing the movie. A story ahead of it's time and very intriguing. I raced through it caring deeply for the protagonists and their chances of sur...more
Elsa
Sep 16, 2007 Elsa rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: apocalypse junkies
A survivor narrates, telling us how an odd new plant cultivar and a terrible celestial accident intersect to bring civilization to its knees.

Though it's easy to dismiss this book as trite sci-fi schlock, author John Wyndham focuses less o the whiz-bang elements of science and more on the crumbling of society's agreements --- the slim line of the social contract that keeps us safe. (If you were were chilled by the military compound Danny Boyle's film "28 Days Later," you may find its inspiration...more
Keith Rainville
An often overlooked modern classic, and any fan of the zombie genre should read this. It's predicament done right - danger with a sense of gravity, scary and leads the imagination to even scarier places.

What's worse than a world infested with aggressive carnivorous plants? A world where 99% of the population has gone blind and is at their mercy. Those "lucky" enough to have retained their sight face a whole new series of dangers.

An author that really thought through the ramifications of the pred...more
Jesus
Una historia interesante centrada, sobre todo, en la fragilidad de lo que llamamos 'el sistema'. Todo funciona perfectamente, como una maquinaria bien engrasada, para que nuestra vida sea fácil y cómoda (todo lo posible). Los logros de la Civilización son asombrosos, todos sustentados sobre la base de 'el sistema'. Pero 'el sistema' es extremadamente frágil, todo marcha a la perfección hasta que surge un problema y todo se desmorona rápidamente sin posibilidad de recuperación. Se clasifica el li...more
Teresa
Before I read this classic novel by John Wyndham, all I knew about it was that it involved killer plants. In actuality, the plants, which are known as triffids, are merely a complication; the sudden onset of blindness among most of the world population is the more serious problem. There are some suggestions that the triffids are somehow behind the blindness, but these suggestions are not explored in much detail. Survival of the human race is the paramount issue for the people of this book; why t...more
Steve
The Day of the Triffids. First read in my teenage years, this was a 20-plus year return to Wyndham and a welcome reunion with a favourite author of that time. This novel is more relevant to today’s society than when I read it first time in the early 1980s, and it offers a remarkable poignancy to the science fiction given that John Wyndham penned this novel only a few years after the end of the second World War. The title comes from the rise of genetically modified killer plants, the Triffids, a...more
Dreadlocksmile
Back in 1951 John Wyndham first published his novel "The Day Of The Triffids". Since then the novel has been hailed as a sci-fi masterpiece and has become one of the cornerstones in the post-apocalyptic fiction subgenre.

Within "The Day Of The Triffids" Wyndham explores humanities need for power and its inevitable downfall towards its own destruction. Wyndam probes away at our lustful need for supposed `civilised development' whilst pointing towards greed as the real motivation towards such adva...more
Mia
Let me get this straight. You have a country of teachers, doctors, farmers, soldiers, leaders, etc., and when most of them become blind they all pretty much become entirely useless and irrational and incapable of planning or thought? I mean, the author does layer extra complications onto the plot -- the titular triffids (which are ominous (and apparently all the Russians' fault)), an unexplained plague -- but come on! And that's not the only unwarranted presumptuous premise that gets presented....more
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John Wyndham Parkes Lucas Beynon Harris was the son of a barrister. After trying a number of careers, including farming, law, commercial art and advertising, he started writing short stories in 1925. After serving in the civil Service and the Army during the war, he went back to writing. Adopting the name John Wyndham, he started writing a form of science fiction that he called 'logical fantasy. A...more
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“When a day that you happen to know is Wednesday starts off by sounding like Sunday, there is something seriously wrong somewhere.” 49 people liked it
“It must be, I thought, one of the race's most persistent and comforting hallucinations to trust that "it can't happen here" -- that one's own time and place is beyond cataclysm.” 42 people liked it
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