The Doom of London by Fred M. White

(7 User reviews)   805
White, Fred M. (Fred Merrick), 1859-1935 White, Fred M. (Fred Merrick), 1859-1935
English
Hey, you know how we always joke about London having terrible weather? Well, Fred M. White took that idea and ran with it—straight into a full-blown, city-smothering disaster. 'The Doom of London' isn't about a monster or a war. It's about a killer fog. Imagine a normal, damp London day that suddenly turns into an impenetrable, poisonous pea-souper so thick it blots out the sun. The city grinds to a halt. People can't see, can't breathe, and panic starts to spread. The real mystery? What if this isn't just a freak weather event? What if someone caused it? White spins a classic 'what-if' scenario that feels chillingly possible, even today. It's a short, punchy read that turns a mundane inconvenience into a gripping fight for survival. If you like stories where the environment itself is the villain, and society's thin veneer gets stripped away in a crisis, you'll tear through this one.
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Let's talk about a book that proves you don't need aliens or zombies to create a proper catastrophe. Sometimes, all you need is some really, really bad weather.

The Story

The book is actually a collection of linked stories, but the main event is 'The Four Days' Night.' London is swallowed by a fog so dense and toxic it becomes a death trap. Streets are pitch black at noon. The air is unbreathable. Everything stops—trains, commerce, communication. As the city suffocates, we follow different characters: scientists trying to understand the phenomenon, officials losing control, and ordinary people just trying to stay alive. The tension builds from confusion to sheer terror as resources run out and the social order begins to crack. Is it a natural disaster, or is there a human hand behind this atmospheric siege?

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was how modern this feels for a book written in 1903. White taps into a very real anxiety about our dependence on systems—transport, electricity, clean air—and how fragile that all is. The characters aren't deeply psychological, but they serve the story perfectly. You feel the claustrophobia and the creeping dread as the fog just... doesn't lift. It's less about individual heroes and more about watching a city have a collective nervous breakdown. It's also fascinating as a period piece, showing an Edwardian vision of technology and science grappling with an unstoppable force of nature.

Final Verdict

This is a perfect pick for fans of early science fiction and disaster stories. If you enjoyed H.G. Wells' quieter, more sociological tales, or if you like modern authors like Neal Stephenson or Emily St. John Mandel who explore societal collapse, you'll find the roots of that genre here. It's also great for anyone who likes a quick, concept-driven story. You can read it in a sitting, but the image of a darkened, silent London will stick with you for a lot longer. A hidden gem for a stormy night.

Anthony Lopez
1 year ago

I have to admit, the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. One of the best books I've read this year.

Barbara Walker
3 weeks ago

After hearing about this author multiple times, the plot twists are genuinely surprising. Definitely a 5-star read.

5
5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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