Selected Product: | Portent Paperback Author: James Herbert Publisher: Pan Books Release Date: May 2007 ISBN-10: 0330451553 ISBN-13: 9780330451550 List Price: £6.99 Average Customer Rating: | | |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Portent by James Herbert (ISBN-10: 0330451553, ISBN-13: 9780330451550). At this time we have not yet written a review for Portent by James Herbert (ISBN-10: 0330451553, ISBN-13: 9780330451550). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com EVERYONE SHOULD READ THIS | Customer Rating: | | As a writer myself whose interest lies in all things environmental, I have been knocked for six by James Herbert's passion, in this book, about the world upon which we live. Cleverly written, it tells a cracking story that also educates and raises awareness and I have not been able to put it down. Everyone should read this book. It should become part of the school curriculum and included in examinations. Not only does it deliver an increasingly important message, it is a roller-coaster of a read and I cannot recommemd it highly enough. | Mother nature will fight back | Customer Rating: | | I agree with the previous reviewer. I read this book when it was first published and likewise whenever we have freak weather I remember this book vividly. A really good read as well. | You won't watch the weather in the same way again | Customer Rating: | This book is bound to be good, it is James Herbert. A very enjoyable read with a good story line and great characters. When you see the news reports of fluke weather you get very freaked out. You have been warned.
I read this book many years ago and I know it made an impression as I always think back to it when I see anything weather related on the news. It's a great book ignore the middle of the road reviews adnd enjoy it yourself. | Ambitious misfire | Customer Rating: | | Following two of the best novels he’d ever written in Haunted and Creed, Portent is an unfortunate misfire from James Herbert. On one hand Herbert’s attempt to depict a world-wide apocalypse is ambitious, but stylistically Portent is a step back to the sort of ‘un-natural disaster’ form he’d used in the likes of the Rats trilogy, The Fog and The Dark, where the lead characters story is intercut with numerous short scenes of disaster-movie-style mayhem featuring new characters who are introduced only to die spectacularly. Where previously this format had led to some tense drama however, here Portent falls oddly flat, with the sheer scale of the destruction sweeping across the Earth so enormous that it’s difficult to actually care about anyone caught up in it – this is death on a widescreen cinematic scale, and while that might make for exciting viewing in a special effects heavy Hollywood disaster movie, it doesn’t quite work in prose form. Also the story of ‘hero’ James Rivers is very thin – he spends most of the novel being slowly convinced of the reasons behind the disasters sweeping the Earth, before flying off to Scotland to have the plot explained to him by some wise old hermit on a hill. Throughout there is no chance of anyone actually being able to avert the disasters, so the characters just sort of passively drift through the novel (at one point Herbert has Rivers frantically attempting to tell the authorities of the explanations he’s discovered for what’s happening, but as they cant actually do anything about it it seems a rather pointless exercise). The closest the novel gets to some actual drama is when Rivers has to protect some psychic twins – the first of a new post-apocalyptic generation - from an opposing force, but it’s too little, too late. James Herbert obviously had his heart in the right place when writing Portent, as with it’s story of a vengeful ‘Mother Earth’ this is Herbert’s big environmental message book, but unfortunately it fails to engage the reader as a piece of dramatic storytelling. Probably his least enjoyable novel, Portent is for Herbert completists only. | Especially scary given todays news | Customer Rating: | | I started reading this book just before the sri lanka disaster. As Herberts work maybe not one of his best but chilling when read in light of the horrific events which happened over Boxing day. |
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