I'm going to confess here and now that I was prompted to read this by seeing the recent movie - I just wanted to see what all the fuss was about! I enjoyed...well, perhaps enjoyed is the wrong word...I was hooked by the premise of the book, set as it is in a post-plague Los Angeles where anyone who hasn't died is a vampire. The hero, Robert Neville, is last man alive, and the first 2/3rds of the story relates to his struggle to stay that way. A lot of it is set in the workings of his own mind and his memories of pre-plague times, the death of his wife and her return as a vampire consuming his thoughts and burdening him with guilt. Added to this are his daily struggles to stay sane in the face of terrible loneliness and vampire attacks every night.
It's well written, if a little dated (he watches movies on a projector). But what jarred with me, and what I wanted to ask anyone else who has read it, is that about 2/3rds of the way in, the novel abruptly changes tack. A whole new cast of characters and locations is added with no explanation. There is for example a lengthy vignette worthy of Stephen King in which a girl is attacked by a voodoo doll, which is very supernatural and at odds with the "realistic" tone of the book up to that point. There is a scene where 2 men and 2 women go to some sort of night club where the "Living Undead" perform a sort of dance, which is very surreal.
I'm still reading it so I don't know how the story will pan out, or if the story is going to go back to Neville eventually, but I just wanted to know if anyone else was thrown by how dramatically the book changes and what you thought of it generally?