Books to die for (part 2)
by Steve Boyett on Nov.25, 2009, under Steven R. Boyett
Finishing my list of postapocalyptic books I think are standouts in the field. Tomorrow we’ll cover movies. Then we’ll get to the nitty gritty.
The Time Machine, H.G. Wells. So often considered as a time-travel classic that it’s easy to forget that this timeless (yuck yuck) novel of social darwinism gone awry gave us the innocent and inept Eloi living clueless in the ruins of their ancestors in the year 802,701, preyed upon by the steampunkish Morlocks, who are maintaining a remnant of civilization apparently by rote. Wells’ unnamed narrator moves even further through time to witness the death of the earth itself, cold beneath an ember sun, as the last living thing stops moving on a barren redlit beach. Wells accomplished all of this in about 60,000 words, too. Amazing book.
The Road, Cormac McCarthy. A boy bonds with his father on a trip to the beach! It doesn’t get any simpler than this: Years after an unspecified apocalypse has destroyed virtually all life on earth (implicitly not all at once but through a chain reaction of ecosystem cascade failure following some global trauma), a father tries to protect his son as they journey toward the ocean and the forlorn hope of community and life. McCarthy reverts to Hemingway minimalism mode (think The Dead Man and the Sea) for this gloriously despairing slog through a bleak devastated landscape. McCarthy never explains his apocalypse, which drives SF purists crazy. Good for him. McCarthy is the most fearless writer in America right now, and arguably our best prose stylist. That he is also commercially popular continues to astonish me, and reinforces my cynical belief that people pretty much read at the level of event and notice little else. I’m perfectly willing to be persuaded I’m wrong.
Alas, Babylon, Pat Frank. Somewhat dated now, Frank’s 1959 novel of a Florida community struggling to survive the aftermath of a nuclear war was one of the first in a long line of “survivalist” postapocalyptic novels in the public conscience. Written in the shadow of the sword of Damocles that hung over an entire generation that felt fairly certain it was going to end up reduced to breathable material, this isn’t a book about politics or social darwinism, it’s a book about trying to have hot water again. That the community is “reduced” to the circumstances of probably half the global population speaks to the appeal of postapocalyptic works in general: Horror for the comfortable is the loss of comforts. What is most interesting about Alas, Babylon is precisely that its characters’ struggles are much less interesting when considered apart from the aftermath of nuclear war — take away the bombs and it’s basically The Mosquito Coast – but that reduction colors everything, and fueled an entire subgenre for decades.
Mockingbird, Walter Tevis. The author of The Hustler was also an underappreciated SF writer who turned in a haunting, poetic postapocalyptic novel about a feckless, illiterate humanity reduced to tranquilized uselessness as they are protected by robot caretakers who were programmed a little too well. Here Tevis explores what it might be like to become the Eloi from the inside, and at the same time he turns in what might be the only novel ever written about the end of humanity due to illiteracy. Tevis’ android supervisor Spofforth is a singular creation and one of my favorites in SF. Inexcusably out of print.
Lord of the Flies, William Golding. This may seem a weird choice in a list of postapocalyptic fiction, but I think apocalypse and the nature of humanity were very much on Golding’s mind when he published this 1954 masterpiece. A group of schoolboys survives a planecrash on an island. Unsupervised and unfettered by social constraint, they reenact the Scene Primeval in miniature, and the book is essentially a meditation on the artificiality of the veneer of civilization and what we are when we shed it (though I’d offer up that one of the things we are is creatures that eventually build civilizations) — the grist for postapocalyptic fiction’s mill. Making war is part of our innate ape heritage to Golding (who also wrote, tellingly, The Inheritors, about early hominids), and the inescapability of this even after we become “civilized” is beautifully brought home when the boys are finally rescued by a navy cruiser — a warship (a detail apparently lost on a great many readers & critics).
The World Without Us, Alan Weisman. This nonfiction book by journalist Alan Weisman seems weirdly to have been written specifically for me, as it surveys what would happen to the world were humanity to suddenly vanish — essentially the premise of Ariel and Elegy Beach (Weisman wisely elects not to wonder what would happen if magic were suddenly possible and formerly mythological creatures were present, though.) This book was astoundingly well-timed, occurring as essentially a reference work just as post-apocalyptic scenarios were sprouting up across all media. A must-read for anyone considering writing about human beings going bye-bye to any significant degree.
Emergence, David Palmer. Palmer’s first novel is a bravura tour de force starring one Candy Smith-Foster, 12-year-old homo post hominem supergenius who survives the end of everything by hiding in her father’s bomb shelter, emerging with her pet parrot Polly to learn how to survive in the emptied world until finally setting out to find others of her own kind. Candy writes in Pitman shorthand, and the book is a blow-by-blow recounting in truncated, telegrapher style (tellingly, Palmer is a court reporter) that shouldn’t work but succeeds gloriously. The wheels come off the storyline by the end, but until that point the novel’s detail and setpieces are wonderfully depicted, and Candy herself is a memorable voice in SF. Palmer is reportedly finishing a sequel (and, David, have fun with the emails you get when you publish a sequel a quarter-century after the original. I know whereof I speak). It’s a tragedy that this book is out of print. Are you listening, SF publishers?
Worth mentioning here is the terrific Jim Burns cover for the paperback original. When Emergence was published I was insanely jealous, as it was exactly the cover I’d imagined for Ariel. Then Ariel was published with its own glorious Barclay Shaw cover and I wasn’t jealous anymore. Even more synchronistically, David and I knew each other in Gainesville, Florida, when our first novels were published. Oooh-WEEEEE-oooooh.
There are some “classics” in the field that I’ve left out of this list because, frankly, they didn’t work for me. If after-the-fall books are your cup of tea (and, golly, why wouldn’t they be?), you undoubtedly have a list of your own fave raves. Feel free to share — you can’t get enough of the end of the world.
Related posts:
- Books to die for (part 1) Before talking about why postapocalyptic fiction and films are appealing, I’d like to take the next few entries to offer up some books and movies I think are standouts in the field. It’s an opportunity to give you a sense of my sensibility (tres clever, no?) and to present some...
- Not with a blog but a writer Thanks so much, Morgan! I just wanted to give a shout out and introduce myself before we jump into the deep end of the apocalypse pool tomorrow. My first novel, Ariel, and its sequel Elegy Beach a quarter-century later, are a bit unusual in that they’re postapocalyptic fantasy novels. The...
- Final Thoughts on Final Things It’s been a lot of fun writing about apocalypses for the last two weeks. It was a chance to survey that (sometimes blasted) terrain and talk about why so many of those mostly fatalistic visions for humanity have enjoyed continued popularity, as well as an opportunity to offer up some...
- After the Fall Sale — Everything Must Go Apart from the personal appeal or romance of apocalyptic fiction and movies (which I also hope we’ve demonstrated is markedly divorced from the actuality of any likely apocalypse itself), there’s a sociological, even anthropological take implicit in these scenarios — the good ones, anyhow — that I find much more...
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The Great Geek Manual » Geek Media Round-Up: November 26, 2009
December 6th, 2009 on 3:25 pm[...] offers up a list of Books to Die For (in two parts), including The [...]



November 25th, 2009 on 4:47 pm
I thought Marcel Theroux’s recent novel FAR NORTH was a worthy addition to the genre, and Jim Crace’s PESTHOUSE is bloody great.
And check out Ronald Wright’s A SCIENTIFIC ROMANCE, a sequel of sorts to Wells’ TIME MACHINE that expounds on the worlds possible in the future.
November 27th, 2009 on 8:22 pm
The Road was one of the boldest and most unexpected Oprah picks. She’s not typically a supporter of post-apocalyptic science fiction novels, but her endorsement drew a whole new audience to it. That likely speaks far more to McCarthy’s incredible talent as a storyteller than any great fascination with science fiction. There was probably a time, not too long ago, when science fiction fans would have called Oprah’s endorsement of a SF novel one of the seven signs of the apocalypse. Good for her, for challenging expectations and her audience.
November 28th, 2009 on 1:23 am
Well, if it had been marketed as an SF novel it would have sold 10 copies. And Winfrey probably wouldn’t have touched it with an eleven-foot pole. And no one would have heard of it anyway, because, you know — it’s an SF novel.
Though I was surprised at Winfrey’s pick of The Road (and totally agree with you that it was bold of her), I was flabbergasted at McCarthy’s agreement to be interviewed by her. He has given exactly three interviews in his life.
I’ve been singing McCarthy’s praises for about 17 years, and it freaked me out completely when The Road was released — and had themes and details startlingly similar to Elegy Beach which I was working on at the time. It kind of unnerved me.
December 3rd, 2009 on 1:26 pm
Thanks for devoting your time to this subject, one of my favorites. I actually just discovered Ariel and just started reading it today, which surprised me because I have read over 100 books that could be defined apocalyptic or post aocalyptic.
Of your list I would mostly agree, the exception being Dhalgren, which I was never able to wrap my head around. Also, I’ve been hunting for a copy of Emergence for years.
A few, little mentioned titles I would recommend.
Malevil by Robert Merle Sort of a french version of Alas, Babylon.
Mister Touch by Malcom Bosse A group makes a cross county voyage through PA America, hampered by the fact that the plague that ravaged the country has greatly diminished their eyesight.
Through Darkest America by Neal Barrett The idea of the Stock always freaked me out a bit.
And some classics:
Earth Abides by George R. Stewart
The Day of the Triffids by John wyndham
Blindess by Jose Saramago
December 4th, 2009 on 11:54 pm
Bob–
I remember Malevil! never read it but remember the cover — The Joads in front of a mushroom cloud.
I made sure to say that I don’t think Dhalgren is for everyone; it’s far and away the most literary and ambitious of all the books mentioned here. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that it’s also my favorite. It’s demanding, and if you’re someone who reads mostly at the level of event you’re going to be sore disappointed. But with the possible exception of The Road it’s also the best stretch of prose of this bunch, or indeed one of the best that I’ve encountered. But I fall in with the Joyce/Faulkner/McCarthy camp, so there’s that to consider.
I didn’t list Earth Abides because — ducking now — I just can’t stand it. I only read it recently and thought, BFD, George. Earth may abide but this shallow approach sure shouldn’t.
I didn’t consider Blindness apocalyptic because it’s only temporary, though I thought about mentioning it. Glad you did! It’s another one that isn’t for everybody. I loved it when I first read it, but tried to reread it recently and found it quite precious and self conscious.
Oddly I have not read a single Wyndham novel. Must rectify that!
As for Emergence, an ebay search revealed four copies for sale — ranging from $15 to $100. Good lord, I’m definitely holding on to mine!