Guy N. Smith
Originally published 1976
This book takes me back - to a time of flared trousers, long summers,
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These books stood out on the shelves - look at the cover here and ask yourself, is it any wonder we spent our pocket money on these books. Course James Herbert kicked off the 1970's trend for creatures on the rampage with The Rats in 1974 but me and my muckers preferred the Crabs because the stories were set in Wales. So in a sense they were all the more scary because we lived in Wales also and the landscape the psychotic crustaceans scuttled over was the very same ground we walked upon.
Now since those days I've grown and become more sophisticated in my tastes - or at least I thought so. Re-reading the book now, as an adult, you realise how much of a good story it is, how well written and if you suspend your disbelief you're in for a treat. The story moves at a breakneck speed and manages to build genuine suspense. OK it all get ridiculous when the giant crabs c
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The idea of giant crabs may seem silly but then so too are killer rats, possessed cars, zombies and vampires. Isn't all imaginative fiction silly to a certain extent
The entire Crabs series is legendary in horror circles and, silly or not, they really are entertaining.
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