Synopsis
The third in the Rats trilogy, international bestseller James Herbert's Domain pits man against mutant rats, who are back with a vengeance.
When five nuclear warheads level London, the survivors believe the worst is over. They are wrong. Beneath the radioactive rubble, in the lightless veins of the London Underground, a prehistoric hunger has awakened.
Steve Culver, a pilot haunted by his past, leads a desperate band of survivors through crumbling tunnels toward a secret government bunker. But the darkness is alive. Enormous, black-furred rats—mutated by radiation and led by a telepathic Mother Creature—are hunting for human blood. As the government’s horrific experiments come to light, Culver realizes these vermin aren't just scavengers; they are a new, dominant species rising to claim the ruins.
Trapped between a lethally irradiated surface and a subterranean nightmare, humanity’s time has run out. In the silence of the deep, the screaming has only just begun.
Praise for James Herbert:
'The Rats is splatterpunk deluxe'
Stephen King
'Lean, mean, and nasty as punk'
Grady Hendrix
'A one-off; a true horror original'
Peter James
Details
Reviews
Not for the nervous
The Rats is splatterpunk deluxe. Not only great, gory fun but a prime example of what was once called "the British nasty." I loved it then, love it still
Lean, mean, and nasty as punk
A one-off; a true horror original






















