Posts Tagged ‘plague’

The Scarlet Plague by Jack London

Friday, January 15th, 2010

The Scarlet Plague might not be the absolute grand-daddy of apocalypse by plague stories (Mary Shelley’s The Last Man was written 75 years earlier) but it’s certainly one of the first, and it’s obviously a base on which more recent authors have built their works. Published in 1912 by Jack London (of Sea Wolf, White Fang, and The Call of the Wild fame), The Scarlet Plague is the first example I know of of the elderly survivor telling the story of the apocalypse to those born after it.

In this case, the survivor is James Howard Smith, Professor of English at Berkeley. He is the last person alive who lived before the plague that killed almost everyone in the world, 60 years earlier. Now, he sits around a campfire with his grandsons, who he calls savages, and describes the events of the last days of the old world.

And the story he tells would be instantly recognizable to anyone who’s read The Stand or similar books. The plague comes on without warning, and kills within an hour. People try to sequester themselves in their homes, but once one person is infected the disease ravages entire families. He specifically mentions governments covering up the reality of how dangerous the plague is, bodies piled in the streets, violence, murder and mayhem.

He flees San Francisco, meets up with a handful of other survivors, and then their descendants begin to form tribal groups known as the Chauffeurs, the Santa Rosans, the Sacrementos, the Palo Altos, and so on. Those descendants quickly revert back to what Smith refers to as the basest savagery. They wear skins, and carry bows and slings. They’re superstitious, have no concept of numbers, and are constantly interrupting and playing tricks on their grandfather as he tells his story.

Overall, I enjoyed it very much. It’s only about 100 pages or so, and it does sort of drag towards the end as he describes who married who in which tribe, but it’s a pillar of the genre, and so anyone who’s a fan should read it at least once.

It’s out of copyright, so is freely available in any format you could want. I did the Librivox audio book version, and the quality of the recording was great.

Huge Bundle of PA Ebooks

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

As I was scroogling for PA book links, I came across a listing for a torrent containing a ton of PA ebooks in htm, txt and pdf formats.  I had a lot of them already, but still it’s a great collection, and many of them I’d never heard of, so it’s a great find.  If you want to find it yourself, do a search on your favorite torrent site for “apocalyptic ebooks” or “Gerard of Utah”.

The collection contains:

Aldiss, Brian – Greybeard
Aldiss, Brian – Hothouse
Anderson, Poul – Vault of the Ages
Atwood, Margaret – Oryx and Crake
Atwood, Margaret – The Handmaid’s Tale
Ballard, JG – The Drowned World
BeauSeigneur, James – Christ Clone Series
Brackett, Leigh – The Long Tomorrow
Brin, David – The Postman
Brunner, John – The Sheep Look Up
Budrys, Algis  – Burning World
Budrys, Algis – Some Will Not Die
Butler, Octavia – Parable of the Sower
Butler, Octavia – Parable of the Talents
Card, Orson Scott – The Folk of the Fringe
Christopher, John – The Death of Grass (AKA No Blade of Grass)
Crace, Jim – The Pesthouse
Crowley, John – Engine Summer
Dick, Philip K – Dr Bloodmoney or How We Got Along After the Bomb
Dickson, Gordon – Wolf and Iron
Disch, Thomas – The Genocides
DuPrau, Jeanne – The City of Ember
Florman, Samuel – The Aftermath
Frank, Pat – Alas, Babylon
Galouye, Daniel – Dark Universe
Goonan, Kathleen Ann – Nanotech Series
Herbert, Frank – The White Plague
Hoban, Russell – Riddley Walker
Huxley, Aldous – Ape and Essence
Kearny, Cresson – (Non Fiction) Nuclear War Survival Skills
Kornbluth, CM – The Syndic
Laumer, Keith – Catastrophe Planet
Leiber, Fritz – Gather, Darkness!
London, Jack – The Scarlett Plague
Matheson, Richard – I Am Legend
McCammon, Robert – Swan Song
McCarthy, Cormac – The Road
McDevitt, Jack – Eternity Road
McIntyre, Vonda – Dreamsnake
Merle, Robert – Malevil (Non English)
Merril, Judith – Shadow on the Hearth
Miller, Walter – St Leibowitz and the Wild Horse Woman
Miller, Walter – A Canticle for Leibowitz
Niven, Larry – Lucifer’s Hammer
Norton, Andre – Daybreak 2250 AD
Norton, Andre – No Night Without Stars
O’Brein, Robert – Z for Zachariah
Pangborn, Edgar – Davy
Sheffield, Charles – Aftermath 1 – Aftermath
Sheffield, Charles – Aftermath 2 – Starfire
Shiel, MP – The Purple Cloud
Shelley, Mary – The Last Man
Shute, Nevil – On the Beach
Simak, Clifford – Cemetary World
Smith, Mitchell – Snowfall Series
Stewart, George R – Earth Abides
Stirling, SM – Change Series
Tucker, Wilson – The Long Loud Silence
Tucker, Wilson – The Year of The Quiet Sun
Varley, John – Millennium
Wilhelm, Kate – Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang
Williams, Walter – The Rift
Wylie, Philp & Balmer, Edwin – When Worlds Collide
Wylie, Philp & Balmer, Edwin – After Worlds Collide
Wyndham, John – The Chrysalids
Zelazny, Roger – Damnation Alley

I just wish Malevil was the English version; am still looking for that one.

ps  If you need a reader to make use of these ebooks, I’d suggest the BeBook.  It doesn’t have the wireless capabilities of the Kindle, but it can read tons of formats natively with no conversion necessary.  I’ve been using one for six months and I love it.

If you’re thinking of getting one, use the referral code iwant@bebookdiscount.com to save 25 Euros.

MEGAT0N – Discussing Books About The End Of The World As We Know It

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

Response to a Comment
Dave posted the following:
“Hey there – attempted to send ya an email on this – I’ve been looking for the name of a book that was read to me in my youth at school. This would have been around or before 1984 or maybe 1985. The basic premise is that everyone over a certain age has died from a plague or disease. There are only kids left. This focuses on probably one boy and 2 girls. I can’t really remember all of it, but I’ve been looking for a while. The boy is starting to get feelings for one of the girls and the other girl gets jealous and I think comes after him or possibly the other girl with a butcher knife. :) That’s about it for remembering. Maybe you’ve read it or have some other ideas on where to look – I’ve checked all of your links and have been searching other internet databases for a while.
Thanks,
Chris”

I’m wondering if he might be thinking of The Girl Who Owned a City by OT Nelson. It was written in 1975, which would fit Chris’ recollection, and Wikipedia says it was often used in schools.

I hadn’t ever heard of it, but it does sound interesting, so I think I’m going to track it down and give it a read.

ps If anyone has any other ideas for the book Chris is looking for, please leave a comment.

Some Recent Reads

Sunday, October 7th, 2007

So it’s been a while since the last post again. Here are some of the books I’ve read over the last few months.

The Road, by Cormac McCarthy. Absolutely fantastic. When I saw that it was an Oprah Book Club pick, I almost skipped it, but that would have been a huge mistake. This book is great; probably one of the most realistic-feeling post-apocalyptic books I’ve ever read. It’s just a story of a man trying to keep his son alive in the aftermath of an un-named apocalypse, but as the father of two myself, I kept wondering how I’d handle those situations. A must read for an fan of post-apocalyptic literature.

Also very enjoyable was World War Z, by Max Brooks. I haven’t read too many zombie books yet, but if you’re a fan of the genre, then this is another must read. Each chapter is a separate account of how a particular individual survived the recently concluded zombie war. But the accounts are in roughly chronological order, so you can get a good idea of exactly how the war played out. Very authentic-feeling and very interesting. It definitely got me in the mood for more zombie adventures.

Then one that I can’t believe I never came across before (because it was written in like 1915) is The Scarlet Plague, by Jack London (yes, that Jack London.) It’s a very quick read; I finished it in one Sunday evening, but it’s pretty good. I was going to say it fits the formula of the elderly survivor telling stories of the before-times to those around him who were born after the apocalypse, but then now that I think about it, this book is probably the originator of that formula itself.

More recently, I read Plague Year, by Jeff Carlson. This one was just okay to me. The premise was interesting, a world-wide nanoplague that kills everyone who’s below a certain altitude. But it never really paid off. I was never really into any of the characters, and the ending felt like it was just a setup for a sequel.

I’m now halfway through Earth Abides, by George Stewart. This one’s a classic that I’ve read before, but I was in the mood for that kind of story so picked it up off my shelf.

I have I am Legend, which I’ve never read before, on reserve at the library, so that will be my next read, I think.

Adding to my "want to read" list

Sunday, February 4th, 2007

Want to get to this one soon, Plague of the Dead by Z.A. Recht, another zombie novel.

Got Another Book Already

Thursday, December 29th, 2005

I got a Borders gift card for Christmas, so even though I’m still reading Batman, I went looking for a book to read next. I ended up grabbing The Big Empty, but J.B. Stephens. It’s written for a 7th grade and up audience, but a lot of good post-apocalyptic novels are kids’ books (Z for Zachariah and the Lois Lowry books come to mind.)

It follows a group of teens through a near-future dystopian society one year after a plague wipes out 2/3s of the population; sounds promising. I didn’t realize it when I bought it, but it’s the first of a set of four books, each of which got decent, but not steller reviews on Amazon.

I really like those kinds of books though, and I’m looking forward to a quick read, so I think I’m going to like it. We’ll see…

Another Favorite Series

Monday, October 31st, 2005

At the opposite end of the spectrum from the Pelbar Cycle is the Ashes series by William W Johnstone, another one of my favorites. It’s more men’s adventure than sci-fi, and takes place in the years right after a limited nuclear and biological war, and the ensuing “aftershocks” of plagues and invading armies. Lots of gun talk and “look, a criminal” bang, dead.

I started reading this one back in the mid-80’s as a teenager, and I have to confess that I only got through the first 14 or so books. From what I understand, it’s up to about 33 books now days.

A review of the series is at http://www.lostbooks.org/reviews/2002-06-28-2.html