Invasion of the Body Snatchers
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Prentice Hall & IBD Number of pages: 224 Language: English (Original Language) Language: English (Unknown) Language: English (Published) |
RRP: £6.99
Watch the skies! Watch the skies!
Review date: 2006-01-20 Rating: 8 out of 10
Dr Miles Bennell is a doctor in this future America of 1976, although has Finney hasn’t really envisaged any social changes looking ahead from his 1954 viewpoint we might just as well consider it the Nineteen Fifties.
Miles works in Mill Valley, California, a typical American small town where, unaccountably, his patients are beginning to suffer from a common delusion; namely that their closest relatives are not their closest relatives, that they are, in fact, impostors.
Miles is ready to write this off as a case of mass-hysteria, until he is called out by his friend Jack Belicec who has discovered a body in his cellar, a body which could be Jack but which lacks the fine detail in the skin of wrinkles and fingerprints.
It transpires that alien seedpods have drifted to Earth and their survival mechanism is to copy living tissue, destroying the original in the process.
By the time Miles and his girlfriend Becky discover the truth, most of the town has been taken over, and it is here that the novel cranks up the suspense, where Miles and Becky are trapped in his surgery, watching the emotionless copies of locals rounding up the uninfected.
Although relatively unknown as a novel it has spawned three major motion pictures. The first, in black and white, is set in a contemporary Fifties US. the second updates the story to a US of the 1980s and thereby, to my mind, loses the essence of the novel which is so rooted in the paranoia of the Fifties that, along with The Puppet Masters, it is a benchmark of the American consciousness of the time. Again, as in Heinlein’s novel, we see the fearful concept of members of one’s own family actually being ‘something else’ thinking different thoughts and adopting different social values.
The films also (perhaps wisely) lose Finney’s upbeat ending in which the Earth is freed, substituting it for an ambiguous nihilistic finale in which the hero is left alone, trying to stay awake and alert the authorities before he is taken over.
Despite its brevity it’s a powerful exercise in suspense, building the pressure from chapter to chapter.
The creatures’ description of their mindless drive to survival is sublime for its time and gives the reader much food for thought on questions of intelligence vs. other survival traits.
Reviews
DOUBLE TROUBLE...
Review date: 2005-01-20 Rating: 10 out of 10
This is a wonderfully inventive story that has spawned three films. Well-written, the book tells the tale of a small town through the eyes of its young doctor, Miles Bennell. It seems the town is undergoing a drastic change which is as subtle as it is deadly. It seems that all the townspeople are not what they seem. They look the same. They sound the same. Their memories are intact. Still, they are just not the same.
Those who have noticed this, suddenly end up retracting their concerns days later. Something is not right in the town of Mills Valley, and Dr, Bennell knows it. Those large seed pods that are suddenly showing up every where are at the root of it. Their unearthly presence is connected to the profound changes that the people of Mills Valley are undergoing, and Dr. Bennell will stop at nothing to save his beloved town and the world from the invasion of the body snatchers.
This is a great story by a wonderfully inventive writer. Jack Finney is a masterful story teller. He expertly weaves a tale that will keep the reader riveted to the pages of this book. It is no wonder that three films based upon this book have been made, "The Invasion of the Body Snatchers" (1956), The Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978), and Body Snatchers (1994). All three are worth watching.
There is no more dangerous enemy than the enemy within
Review date: 2004-02-21 Rating: 8 out of 10
2004 marks the 50th anniversary of this classic science fiction novel's publication, and Invasion of the Body Snatchers remains firmly entrenched in pop culture and continues to exert a significant influence on the writers and filmmakers of today. Everyone has heard of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, no less than three film adaptations of the story have been produced, and the book itself remains in print and will surely remain so for the foreseeable future. What makes this story so popular? The answer to this question isn't so simple. While I think the novel is a thoroughly good, gripping read, there are a few elements of the plot and premise that I find fault with. In the grand scheme of things, these issues have little impact on the story, but I do believe that Finney's novel is not perfect.
Of course, this is a story borne out of a culture of the 1950s seemingly obsessed (at least Hollywood was) with the idea of aliens coming to earth and, in most scenarios, arriving with hostile intentions. "Aliens attack" books and movies were a dime a dozen in those days, and most of them became variations on the same theme. The stories were new, but the ideas were well-established, going back at least as far as H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds. Finney's premise was different than most, and it drew strength not only from its originality but from the political atmosphere of the time. America became quite paranoid in the decade after World War II; the Red Scare had many people observing their neighbors and associates and sometimes wondering if they might actually be Communists. America was preoccupied for some time with the dangers of an invisible, insidious threat within the nation's very midst. Invasion of the Body Snatchers played upon and drew from this type of internal self-doubt and paranoia, and I believe that is its true secret of success.
Finney's "aliens" didn't blast down from the heavens and immediately begin attacking human beings; instead, they arrived silently and secretly - in the very midst of what was unassuming, small-town America, in the form of giant pods. Reports of these pod landings were reported but largely ignored, allowing the spores of alien life to begin their work in secret. The material inside the pods could completely replicate any life form, and thus was born the first "changed" human being. This "new" person looked and acted completely like the original and went about living that person's normal, every day life. The number of changed individuals quickly grew as each day passed. A few people began to sense that one or more of their friends or loved ones was somehow different, but it was all but impossible to prove such a thing to themselves, let alone others. Dr. Miles Bennell, the story's narrator, spoke to several such patients and dismissed their claims as some sort of psychological delusions - at first. His eyes were opened to the truth only when a friend chanced upon a developing replacement body in his home, and by this time virtually the whole town had been changed. Bennell and three other "survivors" were alone, trapped among friends who were no longer themselves, and their growing paranoia soon metastasized into true fright.
What could be more unsettling than the fear that your neighbor, your co-worker, even your own spouse, parent, or child was no longer the person you had known all your life? Anyone and everyone was a potential threat, a secret agent conspiring with others to assimilate you, to rob you of everything you value most in life. External threats and the fears they invoke can be dealt with, set aside for short periods of time; nuclear attack is a horrifying nightmare, but it does not prevent you from leading your normal life in the present. The enemy within is always the most insidious threat, and Invasion of the Body Snatchers is the very embodiment of this most terrifying of fears.
THEY CAME FROM OUTER SPACE....
Review date: 2003-11-02 Rating: 10 out of 10
This is a wonderfully inventive story that has spawned three films. Well written sci-fi, the book tells the tale of a small town through the eyes of its young doctor, Miles Bennell. It seems the town is undergoing a drastic change which is as subtle as it is deadly. It seems that all the townspeople are not what they seem. They look the same. They sound the same. Their memories are intact. Still, they are just not the same.
Those who have noticed this, suddenly end up retracting their concerns days later. Something is not right in the town of Mills Valley, and Dr, Bennell knows it. Those large seed pods that are suddenly showing up every where are at the root of it. Their unearthly presence is connected to the profound changes that the people of Mills Valley are undergoing, and Dr. Bennell will stop at nothing to save his beloved town and the world from the invasion of the body snatchers.
This is a great story by a wonderfully inventive writer. Jack Finney is a masterful story teller. He expertly weaves a tale that will keep the reader riveted to the pages of this book. It is no wonder that three films based upon this book have been made, "The Invasion of the Body Snatchers" (1956), The Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978), and Body Snatchers (1994). All three are worth watching.
CLONING COURTESY OF OUTER SPACE...
Review date: 2003-09-08 Rating: 10 out of 10
This is a wonderfully inventive story that has spawned three films. Written in clear, spare prose, the book tells the tale of a small town through the eyes of its young doctor, Miles Bennell. It seems the town is undergoing a drastic change which is as subtle as it is deadly. It seems that all the townspeople are not what they seem. They look the same. They sound the same. Their memories are intact. Still, they are just not the same.
Those who have noticed this, suddenly end up retracting their concerns days later. Something is not right in the town of Mills Valley, and Dr, Bennell knows it. Those large seed pods that are suddenly showing up every where are at the root of it. Their unearthly presence is connected to the profound changes that the people of Mills Valley are undergoing, and Dr. Bennell will stop at nothing to save his beloved town and the world from the invasion of the body snatchers.
This is a great story by a wonderfully inventive writer. Jack Finney is a masterful story teller. He expertly weaves a tale that will keep the reader riveted to the pages of this book. It is no wonder that three films based upon this book have been made, "The Invasion of the Body Snatchers" (1956), The Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978), and Body Snatchers (1994). All three are worth watching.
Product Details/Specifications
Authors:
Finney
Recording label: Prentice Hall & IBD
Manufacturer: Prentice Hall & IBD
EAN: 9780684852584
Binding: Paperback
Dewey decimal number: 813.54
ISBN: 0684852586
Number of items: 1
Number of pages: 224
Publication date: 1998-04-06
Language: English (Original Language)
Language: English (Unknown)
Language: English (Published)
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