The cover warns that ‘The world will never be the
same again.’ The story begins with newspaper clippings of penguins committing
mass suicide in 1990, then in the next two dozen pages ranges to the near
future, to the Great Barrier Reef, the Gulf of Mexico, and British Columbia,
where we witness the catastrophic demise of some interesting characters; it’s
as though the world’s gone mad, the weather and tectonic systems in concert
with the appearance of eerie bright lights, are causing untold devastation,
swamping islands, killing thousands of people.
One survivor from an earlier disaster, Rivers, a
climatologist, is summoned to the home of a strange family; here, he meets
Diane, her two mysterious adopted children and the academic who believes the
world has had enough with the depredations of mankind and is fighting back…
James Herbert, R.I.P.
Portent is a superior disaster novel, and maintains a tense suspenseful pace throughout. The vignettes are well researched – some of the disasters recognisably extrapolated from recent events (1990s) – and divulge a great deal of interesting detail. The many characters we encounter from numerous countries are believable and evoke sympathy. The action and disaster sequences are graphic but not gratuitous, credible and, because of that, quite horrifying. The various disasters are portents: auguries of the death-throes of a planet? Ultimately, the book is about good and evil, in all their guises. A Green plea which deserves to be heard – and read. Highly recommended.
[Note to politicians – just don’t use this to try to
make us feel guilty and tax us even more!]
No comments:
Post a Comment