Various Cosy Catastrophes and Dreadful Dooms

More or Less Natural Catastrophes | Catastrophes from the Stars | Plagues | Nuclear Accidents and Wars | Post-Holocaust Scenerios | Over-Population | Other Man-Made Catastrophes | Critical Sources on Holocausts and Catastrophes


More or Less Natural Catastrophes


Catastrophes from the Stars


Plagues


Nuclear Accidents and Wars


Post-Holocaust Scenerios

  • Benet, Stephen Vincent. "By the Waters of Babylon" (1937) -- After the "Great Burning" man returns nearly to the stone age but begins to rebuild. Establishes classic pattern.
  • Norton, Andre. Star Man’s Son a.k.a. Daybreak 2250 A.D. (1952) -- Young man and his telepathic giant cat set out to explore ruins of cities. Fight wi giant rats.
  • Simak, Clifford. City (1952) -- Dogs carry on civilization in our absence.
  • Brackett, Leigh. The Long Tomorrow (1955) -- Young men leave their puritanical homes to search for the wonders of "Bartorstown" where some old technology is retained.
  • Wyndham, John. Re-Birth [The Chrysalids] (1955) -- After nuclear war, mutants are rooted out. But some mutants have telepathic powers and represent real hope for future.
  • Miller, Walter M. A Canticle for Liebowitz (1959) -- One of the truly great SF novels: traces new cycle through medieval, renaissance, and technological phases as we build ourselves back only to do it again.
  • Aldiss, Brain. Greybeard (1964) -- Nuclear tests in space doom us to sterility.
  • Dick, Philip K. Dr. Bloodmoney; Or, How We Got Along After the Bomb (1965) -- a paraplegic gets along in Southern California suburbs where paranormal powers are emerging.
  • Zelazny, Roger. Damnation Alley (1969) -- Hell’s Angels take over. >Aldiss, Brian. Barefoot in the Head (1970) -- After a world-war fought with psychedelic chemicals a messiah arises. Prose based on James Joyce.
  • Goulart, Ron. After Things Fell Apart. (1970) -- Balkanized America and female assassins.
  • Sullivan, Shelia. The Calling of Bara*. [Summer Rising] (1975) -- 2044 AD: inflation, nuclear accidents, strikes, general breakdown of infrastructure have resulted in anarchy. Woman takes her son, gifted with strange powers to safety in Ireland.
  • Crowley, John. Beasts. (1976) -- Balkanized US and genetically engineered animals.
  • Wilhelm Kate. Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang (1976)
  • Crowley, John. Engine Summer. (1979) -- After collapse of technological civilization, a few survivors live in Amerindian-style commune.
  • Yarbro, Chelsea Quinn. False Dawn.* (1978) -- Mutant heroine fight her way across a devastated America.
  • Hoburn, Russell. Riddley Walker (1980) -- Brilliant, first-person narration in de-volved version of English, telling story of partial rediscovery of gunpowder. Mystical; amazing. Cult classic.
  • Williams, Paul. Pelbar Cycle (1981-85) Seven Novels: The Breaking of Northwall*, The Ends of the Circle, The Dome in the Forest, The Fall of the Shell, An Ambush of Shadows, The Song of the Axe, and The Sword of Forebearance. -- A millennium after nuclear war, small groups living Amerindian cultures trying to get together.
  • Tilley, Patrick. The Amtrak Wars. (1983-89) Five Novels: Cloud Warrior, First Family, Iron Master, Blood River, Death-Bringer-- Mystics vs. militarists in 30thC North America.
  • Palmer, David R. Emergence.* (1984) -- Supergirl survives and roams the country looking for companions.
  • Streiber, Whitney and James Kunetka. War Day (1984) -A Journey across the U.S. five years after a "limited" nuclear war. Chillingly realistic
  • Grant, Richard. Saraband of Lost Time (1985) and Rumors of Spring* (1987) -- Poetic journeys through landscape devastated by technologies; the last forest begins to grow explosively: quest to find out why.
  • Powers, Tim. Dinner at Deviant's Palace (1985) -- Post-nuclear California: re-enactment of Orpheus story.
  • Swanwick, Michael. In the Drift (1987)
  • Goldstein, Lisa. A Mask for the General* (1987) -- Banking Collapse leaves US a depressed police state; New Age tribes in California live on edge of the law.
  • Colander, Valerie Nieman. Neena Gathering. (Pagent Books, 1988).* -- Coming of age story of young girl in West Virginia after chemical warfare has transformed many into terrible looking monsters.
  • Jones, Gwyneth. Kairos. (1988) -- Attempt to change reality of a polluted, ozone-depleted world through drugs fails.
  • De Lint, Charles. Svaha.* (1989) -- Environmentally degraded 22nd century; Amerind hero.
  • Ingrid, Charles. The Marked Man. (1989) -- Enviormental abuse leads to genetic manipulation, followed by DNA plague.
  • Dickson, Gordon. Wolf and Iron. (1990) -- Economic collapse leads to holocaust; classic tale of survival with friendly wolf.
  • McQuinn, Donald. Warrior (1992), Wanderer (1993), Witch (1994) -- far future rebuilding in Pacific Northwest after nuclear and biological disasters.


Over-Population

  • Kornbluth. Shark Ship (1958) -- Leads to cannibalism.
  • Ballard, J. G. Billenium (1961)
  • Del Rey, Lester. The Eleventh Commandment (1962) -- Catholic church in control means no birth control.
  • Harrison, Harry. Make Room! Make Room! (1966)
  • Blish, James and Norman L. Knight. A Torrent of Faces (1967)
  • Nolan, William F. Logan’s Run -- Mandatory euthanasia.
  • Brunner, John. Stand on Zanzibar (1968; Hugo win and Nebula nom) -- Complex, movie-plotted look at effect of over-population as manipulated by big business and big government in U.S. and Africa.
  • Ehrlich, Paul. "Ecocatastrophe." (1969) -- Short story which presents a condensed version of his predictions in The Population Bomb (1968).
  • Pendelton, Don. 1989: Population Doomsday.* (1970)
  • Silverberg, Robert. The World Inside (1971) -- Life inside giant high-rises.
  • Farmer, Philip Jose. Dayworld (1985) -- Based on short story "The Sliced-Crosswise Only-on-Tuesday World" (1971) -- In the 35th century people spend 6 days out of seven in suspended animation.
  • Heresy, John. My Petition for More Space (1974)
  • Clem, Ralph, ed. No Room for Man (1979) -- Collection of short stories.
  • Pool, Frederick and Jack Williamson. Land's End. (1988) -- People living under sea due to pop explosion; various catastrophes including underwater alien.


Other Man-Made Catastrophes

  • Cooper, Edmund. Seed of Light. (1959) -- Industrial pollution means domed cities.
  • Vonnegut, Kurt. Cat’s Cradle (1963) -- Ice-Mine, created by military to freeze mud --destroys world.
  • Ballard, James. The Burning World (1964) -- Industrial waste causes drought.
  • Aldiss, Brian. Earthworks. (1965) -- Chemical pollution leads to complete soil exhaustion.
  • Blish, James. "We All Die Naked." (1969) Novella in Three for Tomorrow. -- Cited as first prediction of the Greenhouse" effect.
  • Thomas, Theodore L. and Kate Wilhelm. The Year of the Cloud. (1970) -- World disaster caused by compound which fractionally increases viscosity of H2O.
  • Disch, Thomas, ed. The Ruins of Earth. (1971) -- Collection of short stories about ecological disasters.
  • Brunner, John. The Sheep Look Up. (1972) -- One of the very best: devastatingly accurate portrayal of ecological holocaust caused by massive mis-management.
  • Wylie, Philip. The End of the Dream. (1972) -- Bitter scenario of ultimate ecological holocaust.
  • Hayes, Ralph. Last View of Eden.* (1981) -- Story of what happens when a powerful drain cleaner/solvent is accidentally mixed up with bags of animal feed. (Made into a movie with Ron Howard?).
  • Streiber, Whitney and James Kunetka. Nature's End. (1986) -- Carefully envisioned, methodical account of environmental processes (destruction of the rain forests, uncontrolled population growth) which bring the world to the brink of a terrible choice: the Depopulation movement advocates a death draft by which 1/3 of earth's population will die; they are opposed only by a small band of super-intelligent children.
  • Turner, George. The Drowning Towers [The Sea and Summer] (1987) -- Greenhouse effect, rising oceans, over-population, unemployment, and economic collapse make life in 21st century Australia quite a struggle.
  • Brin, David. Earth.* (1990) -- Story of near-future earth (fifty years from now) which has managed to solve a few of the current environmental problems -- endangered species, however, have been moved into Life Arks because of irrevocable habitat destruction. Question of our planetary responsibility is most acutely raised when military research releases a small Black Hole into the center of the earth.
  • Tobias, Michael. Fatal Exposure.* (1991) -- Ozone hole over Seattle causes massive die-offs, blindness, panic among residents of Seattle as the government attempts to cover up.


Parody Langford, David and John Grant. Earthdoom! (1987) -- Spoof of disaster stories.

Critical Sources on Holocausts and Catastrophes

  • Brians, Paul. Nuclear Holocausts: Atomic War in Fiction 1895 1984. 1987.
  • Broderick, Mick. Nuclear Movies: A Critical Analysis and Filmography of International Feature Length Films Dealing with Experimentation, Aliens, Terrorism, Holocaust, and Other Disaster Scenarios, 1914 1990. [2nd ed.]1991.
  • Dewey, Joseph. In a Dark Time: The Apocalyptic Temper in the American Novel of the Nuclear Age. 1990.
  • Ketterer, David. New Worlds for Old: The Apocalyptic Imagination, SF, and American Literature. Doubleday, 1974.
  • Mannix, Patrick. The Rhetoric of Antinuclear Fiction: Persuasive Strategies in Novels and Films. 1992.
  • Rabkin, Eric S., Martin H. Greenberg, and Joseph D. Olander. The End of the World. 1983.
  • Schwenger, Peter. Letter Bomb: Nuclear Holocaust and the Exploding Word. 1992.
  • Shippey, T.A. "The Cold War in SF: 1940-1960." In Science Fiction: A Critical Guide. Ed. Patrick Parrinder. Longman, 1979.
  • Slusser, George E. & Eric S. Rabkin, eds. Storm Warnings: Science Fiction Confronts the Future. 1987.
  • Yoke, Carl B. Phoenix from the Ashes: The Literature of the Remade World. 1987.

Also see Paul Brians’ Author Biblio on: Aldiss, Ballard, Christopher, Wylie, Wyndham



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