The Day of the Triffids
      Published in 195I, I read John Wyndham's The  Day of the Triffids decades ago and  taught Midwich Cuckoo in school, so when it turned up at the library reading group, I thought I probably would not bother, particularly as recent choices have included The Goldfinch and The Improbability of Love, both excellent. . Having seen a rather indifferent film version didn't  make it any more appealing. However, once I began, and got into the story, I found it was compelling.
The Triffids are so well known today it's hard to imagine the impact they must have had on a less sophisticated audience back in the fifties. Visualise a rather evil and badly overgrown perambulating pineapple with a kind of deadly whiplash growing out of the top and you have it. Wyndham's vivid imagination and clear and explicit prose are refreshing. By contrast, pick up a Sunday paper and discover just how much the language has morphed in the last six decades into something almost unrecognisable, and understandable to only the elite few - shades of Clockwork Orange. The precision of the use of language was a delight, the range of vocabulary, the variety of characters, and the twists of the plot, almost forgotten since the last time I read this book, probably in the seventies, were just as enjoyable this time round.
 
  
    
    
    The Triffids are so well known today it's hard to imagine the impact they must have had on a less sophisticated audience back in the fifties. Visualise a rather evil and badly overgrown perambulating pineapple with a kind of deadly whiplash growing out of the top and you have it. Wyndham's vivid imagination and clear and explicit prose are refreshing. By contrast, pick up a Sunday paper and discover just how much the language has morphed in the last six decades into something almost unrecognisable, and understandable to only the elite few - shades of Clockwork Orange. The precision of the use of language was a delight, the range of vocabulary, the variety of characters, and the twists of the plot, almost forgotten since the last time I read this book, probably in the seventies, were just as enjoyable this time round.
        Published on April 21, 2017 13:17
    
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