3.7 stars, rounded up.
Not deemed to be one of Priestley's more serious works, though there is some element of seriousness behind it.
The Doomsday Men is a fanciful tale involving three men who find themselves kept as prisoners in some fortress castle/mansion isolated in the California desert.
This location is where three brothers - a religious fanatic, crazy scientist and a disillusioned millionaire ( whose daughter stays there, too) reside. The three brothers, disillusioned with the world as we know it, have a plan to completely destroy the world, or at least its surface where most forms of life are prevalent.
How did the three men kept as prisoners find themselves in such a location? Well, we find that out in the first three chapters, their stories/ adventures and the circumstances that bring them there.
What can be done to stop these crazy brothers from achieving their aim?
Although the novel feels a little padded out here and there, the tale still moves quickly. There is some good descriptive writing here and the story was filled with enough suspense to keep me turning the pages quickly. It's not believable or credible in any real way but works well as an entertainment.
It could have made a good movie, but it seems Hollywood never showed any interest in filming it.
While the book, published in 1938, works as enjoyable escapism, there is also an underlying message here about the state of the world, of uncertainty about the future and where things are heading with menaces like Hitler and Mussolini, with their increasing power, causing anxiety and concern.