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I Am Legend by Richard Matheson
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I Am Legend

by Richard Matheson

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4,180148543 (3.92)205
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Tor Books (2007), Mass Market Paperback, 320 pages

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Tags:science fiction, fiction
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English (141)  French (3)  Italian (3)  Dutch (1)  All languages (148)
Showing 1-5 of 141 (next | show all)
My score for I Am Legend is a full 5 Stars; however this edition included a number of short stories which do not hold a candle to the main novel. I Am Legend is one of the rare genre-defining stories that occur once in a lifetime, and should be read by anyone with even a remote interest in Zombies or Vampires. ( )
  Qorvus | Jan 4, 2010 |
I Am Legend is a post-apocalyptic, vampire novel following the remaining few months of life of the last man on Earth, Robert Neville. I Am Legend has been adapted into several films first into 'The Last Man On Earth' secondly 'The Omega Man' and most recently the straight to DVD film 'I Am Omega' and of course the most successful adaptation to date, starring Will Smith
I AM LEGEND.

I picked Ricahrd Matheson's I Am Legend from the library last week and read bits of it in between reading large chunks of Bram Stoker's classic vampire novel Dracula. I had known that the 2007 film I Am Legend, was based on Ricahrd Mathesons novel for a long time, but could never find the book anywhere so I just gave up trying to find the book and decided to watch the film first, I always like to read the original novel of a film first so I can compare and so I'm not influenced by the film. But I was not at all influenced by the film at all as the film and book were so unlike that they could have been two completely different stories overall.

in this original classic, Robert Neville is described as a blond-haired, blue-eyed, tanned, middle-aged man who has been living alone in the world for five entire months. The rest of the population floundered by vampirism. Neville does all he can to protect himslef from becoming one of them, determination set in his mind to prevent them from acquiring one drop of his blood. He is the only none-vampiric being, he spends his days repairing damages to his home and staking the damned, by night Robert Neville shuts himself away and drinks himself to sleep. Those who hunger for his blood demand him come out, they have forced cellabocy upon him, deprived him of true social contact, removed him of all human elements...Neville is on the brink of insanity, he wants nothing more than for his life to return to normal, for them to leave him alone...how long can the last man on Earth last?

However, in the 2007 I Am Legend film adaptation Robert Neville is portrayed by Will Smith, a completely different character in accordance to physical appearance, yet Will Smith played the part valiantly, making it one of my all time favourite films...I would probably say my most favourite!! The 'vampires' in the film do not appear to have as much humanity as the type that appeared in the original novel, they sleep in an odd circular formation, breath at a formidable rate and have more of a feral appearance to them. The dog which appears briefly in the book is already a companion to Robert Neville and assists Neville in capturing bait for the vampires so he is able to experiment on them. The dog, which is called Sam, has to been killed by Neville due to it turning into a vampiric dog, I actually cried at this scene.

If I'm truly honest, I preferred the I Am Legend film to the book, mainly 'cos it made me cry, and it's hard to make me cry at a film (I've only cried at two films I Am Legend and Marley & Me, both doggy deaths :O) also because it has a much more action-filled, emotional ending. But, nevertheless I'm not reviewing the film, I'm reviewing the book and giving it a four out of five star rating :D ( )
1 vote JordanLangston | Dec 7, 2009 |
Interesting concept, boring realization. ( )
1 vote wflooter480 | Nov 30, 2009 |
An excellent post-apocalypse vampire story. The ending is quite shocking and the sense of isolation felt by the central character well put across. A well-deserved classic.

This edition also contains a collection of macabre short stories written over a period of nearly 4 decades in the author's career. Some of them have very similar themes (haunting, personal possession, funeral parlours) and a couple of them fell flat for me. The best of these was probably Prey, where the spirit of a killer African doll attacks and then takes over a woman. ( )
1 vote john257hopper | Nov 25, 2009 |
This book is very good. It starts out with Robert Neville has to live with garlic everywhere and keep his house locked. When it becomes night all of the vampires come out. Robert tries to forget about the death of his wife while hunting his neighbor. He is the major character and is static. He is an protagonist and is round. ( )
  Danny_Walker | Nov 19, 2009 |
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Dedication
To Henry Kuttner with my grateful thanks for his help and encouragement on this book.
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On those cloudy days, Robert Neville was never sure when sunset came, and sometimes they were in the streets before he could get back.
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Wikipedia in English (3)

I Am Legend (film)

Night of the Living Dead

SF Masterworks

Book description
Stories in this collection include: I Am Legend, Buried Talents, The Near Departed, Prey, Witch War, Dance of the Dead, Dress of White Silk, Mad House, The Funeral, From Shadowed Places, Person to Person.

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0765357151, Mass Market Paperback)

One of the most influential vampire novels of the 20th century, I Am Legend regularly appears on the "10 Best" lists of numerous critical studies of the horror genre. As Richard Matheson's third novel, it was first marketed as science fiction (for although written in 1954, the story takes place in a future 1976). A terrible plague has decimated the world, and those who were unfortunate enough to survive have been transformed into blood-thirsty creatures of the night. Except, that is, for Robert Neville. He alone appears to be immune to this disease, but the grim irony is that now he is the outsider. He is the legendary monster who must be destroyed because he is different from everyone else. Employing a stark, almost documentary style, Richard Matheson was one of the first writers to convince us that the undead can lurk in a local supermarket freezer as well as a remote Gothic castle. His influence on a generation of bestselling authors--including Stephen King and Dean Koontz--who first read him in their youth is, well, legendary. --Stanley Wiater

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 12:29:47 -0500)

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