![]() ![]() It’s basically the same novel as Slither. I’m off work at the moment though, so after about 2 weeks and 7 other novels, I got going on it. The plot is ludicrous, but the characters are believable, and when I finished this one, I wasn’t dreading the other books in the series.Īlthough I had enjoyed Slither, I didn’t really feel any great desire to immediately pick up Slime, the next entry in the series. He spends more time describing the protagonist’s complicated relationship with his wife. Halkin doesn’t waste much time describing the origin of the worms or their motives. This is the story of a TV cameraman during a killer worm attack on England. I mean, it didn’t win John Halkin the Nobel Prize for literature, but it kept me entertained for a few hours. I was pleasantly surprised to find myself enjoying it. I presumed it was going to be an exercise in scraping the bottom of the barrel, one of those awful novels I can only bare to skim. When I started reading Slither, I didn’t have high hopes. They’re more a trilogy of thematically, structurally and onomatopoeically similar books. ![]() The events in these books make no reference to the events in the others. I’ve seen people write these books off for seeming too silly, but I thought they were actually pretty entertaining. ![]() ![]() The titles and covers of the books in John Halkin’s Slither series are ridiculous, so ridiculous that I had to read them. ![]()
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