The House of Doors

by Brian Lumley

House Of Doors (1)

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Bent on taking over the Earth, the deadly Thone have planted a monstrous device on our planet's surface. Trapped inside is a group of scientists, spies, and innocent bystanders. Part maze, part torture chamber, part laboratory, the House of Doors is a test. If its captives survive, the Thone will withdraw from Earth and leave us in peace. Survival seems impossible. At every turn of the labyrinth the prisoners encounter alien world and terrifying monsters ripped from their own subconscious show more fears. Only by defeating the demons within can these men and women escape the House of Doors and save the Earth. show less

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5 reviews
As part of some kind of alien test, several people are sucked into a series of artificially created worlds, some of which are based around their worst personal fears. They are accompanied by one of the aliens in disguise as a fellow human, but unfortunately for them he's determined to make sure they fail.

It's a potentially fun premise, if not a particularly original one. Alas, in pretty much every other possible respect the book ranges from mediocre to (in the case of its treatment of the lone female character) offensively bad, which I think averages it out to "moderately terrible." Strangely enough, that doesn't mean it's entirely devoid of entertainment value. I think a review on Amazon compared it to a B movie, and I think that's a show more very apt description. Heck, in my mind, even the special effects were pretty bad. Unfortunately, I don't think it ever quite reaches "so bad it's good" levels. More like "so bad it's readable." And sadly, after nearly 500 pages, even whatever B-movie amusement value it possesses starts to get old. show less
This science-fictional horror novel was fast-paced, with 48 short chapters often shifting their focus among various characters. The story was made decidedly less mysterious and less horrific by supplying the villain's-eye view on a regular basis.

The basic premise is that an interstellar civilization has sent an "invigilator" to ensure that no civilized species would be disrupted by their plan to seize and remodel the Earth. This agent has at his disposal a "synthesizer" which can simulate environments in which to test subject species, and this machine/setting is the title's House of Doors.

The human protagonist Spencer Gill is a sort of technopath, capable of intuiting the working of machines. It is obvious from early on that his talent show more is to be the salvation of the six humans picked up by the House, as well as possibly that of the whole human race. A romantic subplot comes off as, well, mechanical.

I picked up this book solely on the virtue of Lumley's authorship, but it was something of a disappointment. While he did make the alien technology sufficiently exotic to pass muster, the narrative and characterizations failed to hold my attention. Towards the end, I was mostly looking forward to being done with it.
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this is one of the few books i've read twice. i read it a second time so i'd remember everything before reading the sequel, Maze of Worlds (House of Doors: The Second Visit in the UK), and also, because i remembered it was great fun.

if you're a fan of the Cube film series, this is right up your alley. utilizing light sci-fi, Lumley introduces us to a microcosmic universe in which the door you choose to open, in an attempt to escape this universe, introduces you to your worst nightmares. this was hip before Saw ever came along, and much more interesting. Lumley comes up with truly inventive and scary worlds behind the doors, not to mention the nasties populating said worlds.

Lumley's characters aren't very developed; he seemed more bent show more on coming up with cool ways to scare people. this is ok by me, as i wasn't expecting complex characters, but rather, a quick, carnival ride of a tale. i got it. show less
First of a two part series. It was good enough on it's own right. Well written and thought out. But Lumley should have kept it there and not went out of his way for the second one. Just a carbon copy. Lumley is my favorite modern writer. Have all his work and read all his work. This is just fodder for his fans.
Bent on taking over the Earth, the deadly Thone have planted a monstrous device on our planet's surface. Trapped inside is a group of scientists, spies, and innocent bystanders. Part maze, part torture chamber, part laboratory, the House of Doors is a test. If its captives survive, the Thone will withdraw from Earth and leave us in peace. Survival seems impossible. At every turn of the labyrinth the prisoners encounter alien world and terrifying monsters ripped from their own subconscious fears. Only by defeating the demons within can these men and women escape the House of Doors and save the Earth.

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Author Information

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257+ Works 15,865 Members
Brian Lumley was born on England's North Coast on December 2, 1937. He joined the British Army in his teens and remained a soldier for twenty-two years. He first started writing while stationed in Berlin. Lumley's first book was published in the early 1970's. He retired from the Army in 1981 and took up writing full time. He is the author of over show more 40 books, and is most well known for his "Necroscope Series" which consists of 13 titles. He won the 1989 British Fantasy Award for his Novelette "Fruiting Bodies" as well as the 1990 Fear Magazine Award for "Necroscope III: The Source." In 1998, Lumley won the Grand Master of Horror Award at the World Horror Convention in Phoenix, Arizona. On 28 March 2010 Lumley received the Lifetime Achievement Award of the Horror Writers Association. He also received a World Fantasy Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2010. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The House of Doors
Original publication date
1990

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Horror, Science Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6062 .U45Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000
BISAC

Statistics

Members
308
Popularity
103,454
Reviews
5
Rating
(3.16)
Languages
English, Polish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
3
ASINs
5