I Am Legend (S.F. Masterworks)
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Average customer review:Product Description
A science fiction novel about vampires....
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #364 in Books
- Published on: 1999-01-21
- Binding: Paperback
- 160 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
It seems strange to find a 1954 vampire novel in Millennium's "SF Masterworks" classic reprints series. I Am Legend, though, was a trailblazing and later much imitated story that reinvented the vampire myth as SF. Without losing the horror, it presents vampirism as a disease whose secrets can be unlocked by scientific tools. The hero Robert Neville, perhaps the last uninfected man on Earth, finds himself in a paranoid nightmare. By night, the bloodthirsty undead of small-town America besiege his barricaded house: their repeated cry "Come out, Neville!" is a famous SF catchphrase. By day, when they hide in shadow and become comatose, Neville gets out his wooden stakes for an orgy of slaughter. He also discovers pseudoscientific explanations, some rather strained, for vampires' fear of light, vulnerability to stakes though not bullets, loathing of garlic, and so on. What gives the story its uneasy power is the gradual perspective shift which shows that by fighting monsters Neville is himself becoming monstrous--not a vampire but something to terrify vampires and haunt their dreams as a dreadful legend from the bad old days. I Am Legend was altered out of recognition when filmed as The Omega Man (1971), starring Charlton Heston. Avoid the movie; read the book. --David Langford
Synopsis
Robert Neville is the last living man on earth ...but he is not alone. Every other man, woman and child on the planet has become a vampire, and they are all hungry for Neville's blood. By day he is the hunter, stalking the sleeping undead through the abandoned ruins of civilization. By night, he barricades himself in his home and prays for the dawn. How long can one man survive like this?
About the Author
I Am Legend, first published in 1954, was Richard Matheson's first SF novel, and established his reputation as a pre-eminent figure in SF
Customer Reviews
Great book - got me back to reading
I'm quite a fussy reader, I can give up on a book at any point for seemingly random reasons so when I find a book that I can't stop thinking about even when I'm not reading then I know it's a good un!
I don't think I can really do this book justice in a review...it just sucked me in and I couldn't stop reading it until it was finished...then I wanted to keep going!
Just leaves me with MORE questions. But an OK book.
Normally, when a film is based on a book I love the book so much more. But not this time. I have to say that I'm liking the film more this time. For anyone that hasn't seen the film or read the book........the book is nothing like the film.......and the film is nothing like the book.. If that makes sense?
The book is good, don't get me wrong. I was scared in parts. However, it's nothing like the film. If you're looking for similar, but better, read 'Salems Lot' by Stephen King.
The only thing the book and the film have in common is that they both involve a man who is probably one of the last few survivors after a virus strikes the population.
With both though, I'm left with lots of questions that aren't addressed and it's frustrating to be 'almost' at the point of knowing it all, but not quite having enough information. I read the book thinking that the unanswered questions from the film would be answered, but all it's done is given me more questions.
Not the movie! Thank my Stars!
I read this book when I was a teenager and after being invited to go see the film(which I review elsewhere) I decided to read it again before viewing the film.
Well it was as exciting now as then.A book that in an oblique way reminded me of "The Body Snatchers". An allegory for our times, a disease that becomes an evolutionary change, where those that are immune are the new enemy.
I found this book well plotted and thought provoking, unlike the film.
Read it!Read it twice!





