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The Children of Men Kindle Edition

4.1 out of 5 stars 3,276 ratings

Award-winning P.D. James, one of the masters of British crime fiction, plots this atmospheric and disturbing novel in the year 2021. Children of Men is a brilliant mystery possessing all of the qualities which distinguish P.D. James as a novelist.

Under the despotic rule of Xan Lyppiatt, the Warden of England, the old are despairing and the young cruel. Theo Faren, a cousin of the Warden, lives a solitary life in this ominous atmosphere. That is, until a chance encounter with a young woman leads him into contact with a group of dissenters. Suddenly his life is changed irrevocably, as he faces agonising choices which could affect the future of mankind.

PD James is the world's pre-eminent crime writer, most famous for her Adam Dalgliesh mysteries and for her bestselling titles
Death Comes to Pemberley and The Murder Room. Children of Men was adapted into a hit film in 2006, directed by Alfonso Cuarón the film starred Clive Owen, Michael Caine and Julianne Moore.

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Product description

Review

"A book of such accelerating tension that the pages seem to turn faster as one moves along." --Chicago Tribune

"As scary and suspenseful as anything in Hitchcock." --
The New Yorker

"Extraordinary.... Daring.... Frightening in its implications." --The New York Times

"Fascinating, suspenseful, and morally provocative. The characterizations are sharply etched and the narrative is compelling."--Chicago Sun-Times

"[James] writes like an angel. Every character is closely drawn. Her atmosphere is unerringly, chillingly convincing. And she manages all this without for a moment slowing down the drive and tension of an exciting mystery." --The Times (UK)

Review

Taut, terrifying and convincing. ― Daily Mail

Extraordinary . . . P.D. James stretches her considerable talents in this daring novel. ―
New York Times

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B002RI9YDC
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Faber & Faber (20 Nov. 2008)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 1.5 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 292 pages
  • Page numbers source ISBN ‏ : ‎ 0571204651
  • Customer reviews:
    4.1 out of 5 stars 3,276 ratings

About the author

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P. D. James
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P. D. James is the author of twenty previous books, most of which have been filmed and broadcast on television in the United States and other countries. She spent thirty years in various departments of the British Civil Service, including the Police and Criminal Law Departments of Great Britain's Home Office. She has served as a magistrate and as a governor of the BBC. In 2000 she celebrated her eightieth birthday and published her autobiography, Time to Be in Earnest. The recipient of many prizes and honors, she was created Baroness James of Holland Park in 1991 and was inducted into the International Crime Writing Hall of Fame in 2008. She lives in London and Oxford.

Photo credit Ulla Montan

Customer reviews

4.1 out of 5 stars
3,276 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this dystopian novel compelling and well-written, with a believable future setting that raises interesting points for discussion. The book receives positive feedback for its character development and thought-provoking content, with one customer noting how deliberately chosen words contribute to its effectiveness. While customers appreciate the writing style, some mention the story has a slightly slow start.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

37 customers mention ‘Readability’37 positive0 negative

Customers find the book enjoyable and compelling, with one customer noting it's better than the film adaptation.

"...Yet she did it very well. The book is compelling. The world building simple but credible and the characters all well drawn...." Read more

"...the film recently and enjoyed it, but now I see that the book is heaps better then the film which is only very loosely based on ideas from the book...." Read more

"...I read it very quickly. It was a real "Page Turner"." Read more

"...(which i loved) it's different to the film in many ways and is a fabulous read, i liked the book's outcome better than how they wrapped things up in..." Read more

34 customers mention ‘Dystopian storyline’25 positive9 negative

Customers enjoy the dystopian storyline of the book, praising its believable future setting and engaging plot.

"...What we do get is considered, thoughtful prose, a slow unfolding of the back story and a build to the end that feels realistic and depressingly..." Read more

"...The book is a cleverly crafted and written dystopia, it contains really interesting ideas and action and the tension mounts steadily...." Read more

"...It is beautifully written and the development of character, plot and society is masterful...." Read more

"A great story concept and believable dystopian future, but too much description for me, and the writing style seemed 1950s so I found it tedious in..." Read more

25 customers mention ‘Thought provoking’25 positive0 negative

Customers find the book thought-provoking, with its interesting concept and ability to raise points for discussion.

"...Yet she did it very well. The book is compelling. The world building simple but credible and the characters all well drawn...." Read more

"...For me, personally, I am a little surprised at that. I found this a thoughtful, well written and plotted account of a dystopian world in which the..." Read more

"...The book is a cleverly crafted and written dystopia, it contains really interesting ideas and action and the tension mounts steadily...." Read more

"...beautifully written and the development of character, plot and society is masterful...." Read more

16 customers mention ‘Writing quality’16 positive0 negative

Customers praise the writing quality of the book, noting its thoughtful prose and readability, with one customer highlighting how every word seems deliberately chosen.

"...What we do get is considered, thoughtful prose, a slow unfolding of the back story and a build to the end that feels realistic and depressingly..." Read more

"...It is beautifully written and the development of character, plot and society is masterful...." Read more

"...more of the main character's personality from the book though, very well written, gripping and sad and i just wanted it to go on and find out what..." Read more

"...It has several well-written points which provokes the reader to think about pressing issues like euthanasia and immigration...." Read more

7 customers mention ‘Tension’5 positive2 negative

Customers find the book's tension engaging, with one describing it as frighteningly prophetic, while another finds it disturbing yet fascinating.

"...dystopia, it contains really interesting ideas and action and the tension mounts steadily...." Read more

"Wonderful read, tense and gripping...." Read more

"...As expected the air of menace is unrelenting and there are one or two striking and upsetting passages such as the mass "Quietus" of the elderly on a..." Read more

"Better than whodunit and frighteningly prophetic" Read more

5 customers mention ‘Character development’5 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the well-drawn characters in the book.

"...The world building simple but credible and the characters all well drawn...." Read more

"...It is beautifully written and the development of character, plot and society is masterful...." Read more

"...The characters were beautifully drawn and right up to the final chapter I was not sure how it was going to end...." Read more

"...A slightly slow start but Theo is a fascinating if off-putting character, intriguing enough to keep going. By the end I couldn't put it down..." Read more

7 customers mention ‘Pace’3 positive4 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's pace, with several noting a slightly slow start.

"A little brutal I thought but a true classic from P D James. I read it very quickly. It was a real "Page Turner"." Read more

"...I found this to be a slow burner and didn't really win me over though my dad seemed to enjoy it so I have settled on a compromise of 3 stars." Read more

"...I really enjoyed the book's much slower pace and focus beautiful details still surving in a totalitarian, failing state." Read more

"A book that draws you in. A slightly slow start but Theo is a fascinating if off-putting character, intriguing enough to keep going...." Read more

Top reviews from United Kingdom

  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 10 June 2023
    The film "Children of Men" was superb and I was surprised at the time to learn it was adapted from a book by PD James. Lady James, as she became was enobled because of her work in support of the arts and her numerous best selling detective novels featuring the bloodless Adam Dalgleish - an police inspector who wrote poetry! I suppose it's a change from mysogyny and racism.

    I couldn't imagine Phyliis James, pillar of the establishment stooping to sci fi. Yet she did it very well. The book is compelling. The world building simple but credible and the characters all well drawn. As expected the air of menace is unrelenting and there are one or two striking and upsetting passages such as the mass "Quietus" of the elderly on a beach followed by a seaside landlady's refusal to see what has just happened.

    Some might baulk at the ending - PD James was religious and a fan of the Cranmer prayer book, but for me it did not detract from a superb book.

    Sadly PD James has passed on, because I really would have liked to know what she made of the film. It seems to me all the director wanted was the central idea, and the names Julian and Theo for characters. The rest of the book was ignored.

    Strange how one idea can generate two such different piece of art.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 2 March 2022
    This has mixed reviews on Goodreads, with a relatively low average rating.

    For me, personally, I am a little surprised at that. I found this a thoughtful, well written and plotted account of a dystopian world in which the future of mankind is at risk.

    Maybe the issue for some is that this is a dense, dour reading of such a situation. There is little flair or excitement and little in way of action.

    What we do get is considered, thoughtful prose, a slow unfolding of the back story and a build to the end that feels realistic and depressingly familiar.

    Overall, I liked this. It loses a star as for me, it's literally style sometimes feeling a bit heavy handed for me tastes but overall, I would recommend this.
    6 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 23 March 2014
    The premise of the book probably earned it a film adaptation. The human race can no longer reproduce. And as the species approach its extinction year by year, a crumbling society leads to an authoritarian government trying to maintain order when people can see there is no future. Unfortunately, to drive this premise forward, P. D. James concocted an ensemble of the most uninspiring resistance activists ever to take centre stage in a dystopian novel. They meandered around, and towards the final chapters, the reader begins to think that in this fictional universe, maybe it's no bad thing to know that the end is nigh.
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 28 May 2013
    I saw the film recently and enjoyed it, but now I see that the book is heaps better then the film which is only very loosely based on ideas from the book. The book is a cleverly crafted and written dystopia, it contains really interesting ideas and action and the tension mounts steadily. It examines our overriding animal and species need for survival though reproduction - physically and culturally. It's a thought experiment, looking at what might happen if reproduction becomes impossible for humans, and how then the meaning of life begins to evaporate. It also looks at how this particular fictional society is organised around dwindling human resources for a truly ageing population and no children. Democracy, fairness and idealism go to pot - people in general no longer care, as long as they are secure and have sufficient to meet their personal needs. The feeling of menace haunts the book throughout, sometimes erupting into gripping and frightening action. On one level, this book is a love story, but even the seemingly happy ending has more than a hint of an ironic and sinister twist. This is a very, very interesting dystopian novel that will stay with you once you have finished it.
    11 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 7 August 2018
    This is a very different book from PD James’s usual subject matter. A dystopian novel with some similarities to, e.g. Margaret Atwood’s Handmaid’s Tale and John Wyndham’s Consider Her Ways (a long short story in one of his collections of short stories). I haven’t looked up the relative dates of these novels, none of which are new, but they all resonate to a degree with current global issues. I gave it 4 stars as it wasn’t a book I couldn’t put down, except towards the end, but it was one I found myself thinking about, which I find is always a good sign. It is beautifully written and the development of character, plot and society is masterful. I don’t want to say more as I think it’s a book best read ‘cold’ without any hints or spoilers.
    21 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 April 2025
    A little brutal I thought but a true classic from P D James. I read it very quickly. It was a real "Page Turner".
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 November 2024
    A great story concept and believable dystopian future, but too much description for me, and the writing style seemed 1950s so I found it tedious in places. The book is much better than the film, which although ok is quite far from the story
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 7 December 2014
    The first PD James book i've ever read (sadly she passed away last week, when i was just getting into this one) - if you've seen the film (which i loved) it's different to the film in many ways and is a fabulous read, i liked the book's outcome better than how they wrapped things up in the film, but it's different in many other ways too, although the race against time aspect is very much there, same way - and you really feel the sense of acceptance of loss for mankind, you feel more of the main character's personality from the book though, very well written, gripping and sad and i just wanted it to go on and find out what happens next!! I have already downloaded another PD James novel, i've got a lot to go at, so i'm off and running with her now. RIP what a talent.
    3 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • george hadley
    5.0 out of 5 stars The book is totally different and far better, the concept of the story is believable and ...
    Reviewed in Australia on 29 June 2016
    I bought this book after seeing the movie based on it. The book is totally different and far better, the concept of the story is believable and engrossing. I am not a fan of murder mysteries and had not read P. D. James before but I might try another of her works now.
  • Samuel W. Coulbourn
    5.0 out of 5 stars intelligent police officer Adam Dalgleish
    Reviewed in the United States on 27 August 2015
    Our book club was examining "The History of the Future."
    I chose a fascinating story by a mystery writer, P.D. James, a well-known Englishwoman. Phyllis Dorothy James was born in 1920, and died just two months ago. She became famous for her crime fiction, many featuring the suave, intelligent police officer Adam Dalgleish.
    Children of Men begins in England on January 1, 2021. Dr. Theodore (Theo) Faron, an Oxford don, writes in his diary that the last human to be born on earth has been killed in a pub brawl.
    In 1994, the sperm counts in human males dropped to zero all over the world. The last people to be born were the “Omega” generation, born in 1995. They are described as spoiled, over-entitled, remote and unstable. They are known to show undisguised contempt for their elders.
    Since everyone knows that eventually, humans will all die off, there are discussions about what to do with our beautiful creations on earth, our universities, libraries, museums and churches.
    While no more humans are being born, animals continue to be born, and it turns out that many, mostly women, have turned their attention of bringing up their animals—cats and dogs—like children, dressing them in clothes, pushing them around in prams. They hold elaborate christening ceremonies for newborn pets.
    Women also dote upon dolls the same way. Many spend thousands on beautiful dolls, and likewise push them around in prams, etc.
    There are no children’s playgrounds—the government demolished all of them several years ago. There are no toys, and schools have been turned into storerooms, or just abandoned. Since there are no births, the population is gradually dropping, worldwide.
    England is ruled by a Warden, named Xan Lyppiatt, a sort of benign dictator. He and Theo grew up together, he from a noble family, and Theo from a less privileged part of the same family. They spent summers together in the English countryside.
    Xan and his council of five are preparing the country for the eventual extinction of all citizens. They have established the Isle of Man as a prison colony, and citizens found guilty of a crime are sent there. They don’t come back, and they don’t escape. Parliament acts in an advisory capacity; judges rule in criminal cases without any jury. And of course, there is a secret police organization.
    As people grow old and need more care than is available, they have the opportunity to engage in “Quietus”, wherein older people may “voluntarily” elect to go aboard a special vessel that goes out a distance from shore and sinks, with all chained to the deck. Some, it is reported, didn’t actually choose to do this.
    Theo is approached by a nice young woman named Julian. It turns out she is one of a group of dissidents called The Five Fishes. They are determined to upset Xan’s tidy world, by fighting to release the prisoners on the Isle of Man, end the Quietus voyages, and return England to democracy. The other “Fishes” are Rolf, Julian’s husband, Luke, a former priest, Miriam a midwife who for 25 years has had no babies to deliver; and Gascoigne, who is quite clever with explosives.
    The Fishes want Theo to approach Xan and ask for various reforms and a more democratic system. He travels to meet with Xan and his council. That meeting does not go well.
    Theo goes on a long trip for several months in Europe. When he returns, Julian contacts him. Gascoigne has been arrested as he tried to blow up the landing for a Quietus ship, and the Secret Police will soon be looking for the other four Fishes.
    Julian discloses that she is pregnant. In a world where no one has been pregnant for 25 years, this is a big deal. Theo joins the group, and they all take off in the car of a professor friend of Theo’s, heading for Wales, and some place where they can hole up until the baby is born.
    That is the part in this tale which is full of adventure and intrigue. As they drive through the English countryside they encounter a gang of wild Omegas, all with wild face-painting, dancing around their car. They force the Fishes out, beat them, killing Luke, then burn their car.
    The climax in the tale comes when the Fishes find a place to stop, just in time, because Julian is about to deliver. She delivers a fine baby boy. By this time, Julian is the last of the five Fishes—the others have been killed. Xan arrives on the scene with the secret police. Xan hates to do it, but aims and shoots at his cousin. He misses. Theo, who has been carrying a pistol with one bullet since this escape began, shoots, and kills Xan. Theo takes Xan’s huge coronation ring and puts it on his own finger, and takes over England. Just like that.
    What was P.D. James trying to say in this story? Is she suggesting that modern society, in its effort to reduce “unwanted pregnancies” has over-corrected and created mass sterilization?
    What about the ladies with the dogs and cats and dolls in prams?
    What about the wild young Omegas?
    James’ Children of Men reminds me of Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, published 60 years earlier, in 1932. And also George Orwell’s Animal Farm (1945) and 1984 (1949).
    Huxley foretold of state control of reproduction and in vitro fertilization techniques, designer babies and a marvelous plan to create a whole population of compliant, willing servants of the state.
    Orwell in his two books warned us about Communism and Stalin at a time (at the end of World War II) when increasing numbers in England and America were becoming intrigued by the idea of communism. I read both books when I was a teen ager, and it helped me to look at the USSR with more critical eyes. I later got to spend two years in the USSR and confirm for myself that Orwell had it right.
    These writers are trying to tell us something, and it may be worth it to pay attention.
  • Michael Zenger
    5.0 out of 5 stars Entspricht genau der Beschreibung
    Reviewed in Germany on 25 August 2024
    Alles bestens
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  • Nancy Butler
    5.0 out of 5 stars book was received in pristine condition
    Reviewed in Canada on 29 April 2023
    Thank you
  • Ribeiro
    5.0 out of 5 stars PD James / Children of men / un grand livre !
    Reviewed in France on 17 January 2015
    Un livre formidable, qui marque un peut comme La Servante écarlate de Margaret Atwood.
    L'espèce humaine ne parvient plus à se reproduire, l'organisation politique est basée sur un dictature.
    La notion de bonheur n'existe plus.
    Superbement écrit, se lit très facilement en anglais.
    Lecture recommandée.

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