Overview
One day the rain just didn’t stop. As the flood waters slowly rose and coastal cities and towns disappeared, some people believed it was the end of the world. Maybe they were right. But the water wasn’t the worst part. Even more terrifying was what the soaking rains drove up from beneath the earth -- unimaginable creatures, writhing, burrowing...and devouring all in their path. What hope does an already-devastated mankind have against...the Conqueror Worms?Synopsis
One day the rain just didn t stop. As the flood waters slowly rose and coastal cities and towns disappeared, some people believed it was the end of the world. Maybe they were right. But the water wasn t the worst part. Even more terrifying was what the soaking rains drove up from beneath the earth -- unimaginable creatures, writhing, burrowing...and devouring all in their path. What hope does an already-devastated mankind have against...the Conqueror Worms?
Publishers Weekly
Just in time for picnic season, Keene delivers this wild, gruesome page-turner about two elderly West Virginia good old boys menaced by giant earthworms-and worse. Octogenarian Teddy Garnett tells this story of a global flood that has left humanity in tatters. Holed up in his mountain home, Teddy and his buddy Carl Seaton struggle through daily life, puzzling over things even stranger than a 40-day rainstorm, including the giant slime-coated holes that keep showing up in Teddy's yard. Before long, Teddy and Carl are fending off man-eating earthworms the size of buses. A helicopter crash nearby brings Kevin and Sarah, the last two survivors of an outpost in Baltimore, into Teddy's story; their tale makes up the even more bizarre second part of the book that explores, graphically, the insanity doom can inspire. It all leads to a slam-bang showdown back at Teddy's house with a creature so monstrous it scares even the killer annelids. The awkward framing story-a crushed, dying Teddy writing the novel in a notebook in the tale's aftermath-though a nod to H.P. Lovecraft and H.G. Wells (both obvious influences), can detract from the plot's urgency. Clunky dialogue also slows the action, but the enormity of Keene's pulp horror imagination, and his success in bringing the reader over the top with him, is both rare and wonderful, and more than outweighs these small concerns. (May) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
Editorials
From Barnes & Noble
The Barnes & Noble ReviewPut on your galoshes and head for high ground! A flood of biblical proportions is coming in Brian Keene's apocalyptic thriller, which pits the few remaining human survivors of a devastating 40-day rainstorm against monstrous adversaries nightmarish enough to give H. P. Lovecraft the creeps.
The Bible verse Job 14:19 -- "…the things which grow out of the dust of the earth and destroyest the hope of mankind" -- is a fitting theme for The Conqueror Worms. After most of the world's landmass is covered by floodwaters, previously unseen subterranean creatures (enormous squid, giant worms, etc.) rise up to wreak havoc on civilization and feast on succulent human flesh. As the land is slowly taken back by ever-increasing water levels, the last remnants of humankind -- like nicotine-addicted WWII veteran Teddy Garnett, Baltimore video store clerk Kevin Jensen, and crazed West Virginia redneck Earl Harper -- must find a way to survive the mounting pitfalls: starvation, sickness, insanity, nomadic gangs of killers, and a strange mold (called the White Fuzz) that is steadily covering every living thing.
Incredibly fast paced, emotionally charged, and gruesomely entertaining -- who doesn't love giant, slime-covered worms trashing cities? -- The Conqueror Worms can be faulted only for not fully exploring the cause of the 40-day rainstorm. Was it the greenhouse effect, some secret government weather project gone horribly wrong, black magic, divine retribution? Regardless, fans of postapocalyptic thrillers will enjoy this one -- gloriously horrific! Paul Goat Allen