8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Rats-a-Roni on my staircase?, October 25, 2004
This review is from: Plague (Paperback)
What sets "Plague" apart from many other catastrophe novels is the unbelievably brisk pace of the tale, diving immediately into the foul waters of a polluted Florida beach and traveling from breakneck speed all up the eastern seaboard.
Dr. Leonard Petrie is a wealthy physician catering to the sun birds of Florida when a knock on his door brings him to a very sick little boy. Dr. Petrie immediately rushes the boy to the hospital, but its already too late. Within only four days, the State of Florida is quarantined and millions are dying from a mutated bacilli that washed up on their shoreline, some within only twelve hours of exposure.
Dr. Petrie, his nineteen year old girlfriend Adelaide Murry, and little daughter Pricilla (Prickles) manage to get past the roadblocks, only to discover that the plague has flown on before them. They decide to head for Manhattan, which they heard was sealed off as a clean zone.
In New York, we meet Ivor Glantz, acclaimed research biologist and his lovely step-daughter Esmeralda, aging movie actor Herbert Gaines and his young lover Nicholas, Kenneth Garunisch, president of the Medical Workers Union, and Edgar Paston, an average shop-owner plagued with delinquents ruining his store.
Dr. Petrie manages to find his way to Ivor's incredible New York apartment in the exclusive Concorde Towers, where he convinces Ivor to work on a way to slow the plague, while Herbert Gaines is blackmailed into making public racial announcements placing blame for the plague on the black and Hispanic communities.
Kenneth puts his workers on strike and escalates the downfall of civilization, while Edgar strikes up an unusual alliance with the leader of the delinquent gang to get himself out of Jersey.
From the first page on, you won't be able to put this book down. If you love disaster books like I do, you should scrounge up a copy of this one. And if you like rats...well, you will love the furry parade coming out to greet you and say hello with their sharp little teeth.
Incredible pace and juicy subplots make Masterton's "Plague" a winner, with a tiny lesson thrown in about dangerous polluters and having an "I don't care" attitude. Sometimes, things come back to haunt us. Enjoy!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent thriller from a master of horror, February 19, 2002
This review is from: Plague (Paperback)
Graham Masterton, while most known for his horror novels (The Manitou, The Djinn, The Sphinx, etc.), wrote a number of thrillers early in his career. Plague is one of those and it is also one of his best works. While the overall premise *may* be a bit farfetched, it is still a highly entertaining read.
The novel centers around a plague started from contaminated waste located off beaches in Miami. The plague starts slowly, only infecting a few, but eventually explodes throughout the city, eventually across state lines and further. The novel has two parts -- the infection followed by the survivors trying to stay alive while trying to find a cure. The ending is somewhat unique and leaves something to the imagination of the reader.
The book is currently out-of-print, but can probably be found in used book stores or from various websites that sell used books. If you can locate a copy, grab it, read it, and enjoy.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
GREAT Read, but..., February 27, 2007
This one I will keep short.
I LOVE Plague books, the relentless creeping doom, and This book Delivered Big Time...early on.
The middle gets bogged down a little but still pulls ahead of most - be warned though, this one has, IMOHO the cr*ppiest ending (that makes little sense and leaves one hanging) in the history of the written word.
That said, if sickness makes you shudder, lie down, get plenty of bed rest and pick this book up fast. :)
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No