Saturday, October 23, 2021

Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse

Ron Livingston and Henry Thomas standing in front of large lab mixing equipment
The End of the Whole Mess by Stephen King ★★★★★ 
"The world needs heroic measures, man. I don't know about long-term effects, and there's no time to study them, because there's no long-term prospect. Maybe we can cure the whole mess. Or maybe—" 

I read Nightmares & Dreamscapes when it first came out in the early 90s, and was ridiculously proud of myself (huge book); this was the story that stayed with me. It was my first apocalypse story, and it felt real because there were no zombies, no aliens, no Revelation. Just Yankees coming down to Texas and deciding they knew it all and had the right to “fix us.” 

Decades later it’s still chilling. Somehow more so hearing Waco mentioned again and again as a place of peace and madness - known today for the Branch Dividian Rape Factory.

A blonde woman looking sad with a scar across face slightly damaging her eye
Inertia by Nancy Kress ★★★★★ 
“To do the wrong thing, she had decided, is better than to do nothing.” 

A beautiful, hopeful version of King’s The End of the Whole Mess. A disfiguring disease has been quarantined for generations, peaceful generations as the outside world crumbled in anger and violence. One doctor would like to cure the disfigurements to spread the peace.

A woman backlit by fire with the caption It Was All of Us
Bread and Bombs by M. Rickert ★★★★½ 
“The grownups assemble to discuss how we will not be ruled by evil, and also, the possibility of widening Main Street.” 

I liked this more than was seemly. With all the adults reminiscing, dangerously, about the old world the children come up with a simple idea about how to stop them.

Five young ethnically diverse women staring intensely as the camera from the water with the caption It's A Woman's Town Now
Killers by Carol Emshwiller ★★★★☆ 
Loved it! When the men go off to war, and don’t return, the women carry on in peace. They enjoy the few nice men who return, but the bad ones... Well, it’s a long winter. Whahaha.

Black and white photograph of a sad pretty little girl with the caption Daddy, Scared
The Last of the O-Forms by James Van Pelt ★★★★☆ 
I shuddered at the end of that story. A man with a traveling circus of mutated animals is going out of business. People won’t pay to see the creatures they struggle with daily but his perfect little girl... oh, they are just dying to touch a flawless child. This story reinforces the truth that people who will abuse animals will abuse other people.

A young bicycle gang in front of the British Projects
Artie’s Angels by Catherine Wells ★★★★☆ 
“Bicycles are the answer.” And because he was Artie, we believed him. 

That was almost a tearjerker. A barrio leader/prodigy sacrifices everything to bring hope to a dying world. It was rather beautiful the way the story would stop and take a moment, This is how the story would go if it ended here with a smile... but this is what really happened... 

A beautiful icy mountain range with a single bird claiming the sky the caption says I Feel Like Now I'm Finally Getting to See It The Way It's Suppose To Be
Judgement Passed by Jerry Oltion ★★★★☆ 
What an interesting addition. Astronauts come home to a world where all the humans have left in The Rapture. Will God return, is this a punishment? No, it’s a blessing. The whole world is clean, and bright, and yours!

50s Style monster movie poster with a monster going after a screaming beautiful woman with the caption Terrifying Monsters From A Lost Age The Mole People
Dark, Dark Were the Tunnels by George R. R. Martin ★★★★☆ 
In a tribute to Atom Age SciFi Martin brings us back to Earth five hundred years after a nuclear disaster cut off contact from Luna. Earth humans have evolved in the dark, developed psychic connections which each other and their pets. 

Things go wrong when the Luna explorers freak out and kill a beloved pet. For the record if you shot my German Shepherd I would not be responsible for my crazy vicious actions.

A steampunk village with dirgibles in the air and a market underneath
Waiting for the Zephyr by Tobias S. Buckell ★★★½☆ 
Two generations after collapse the big cities cling to life on nuclear power but small towns have entered a dark age. Only the new airships connect towns to cities. This story was not long enough!

City grown over with nature beautiful and green
Never Despair by Jack McDevitt ★★★½☆ 
“You've implied that the world outside is in ruins." 
“Oh, no. The world outside is lovely." 
“But there are ruins?" 
“Yes." 

It’s a Future Primitive quest for the past story with shades of The Time Machine (2002). Entertaining, but I wanted more.

A black and white badge that says I would love to change the world but they won't give me the source code
When Sysadmins Ruled the Earth by Cory Doctorow ★★★½☆ 
“There in the humming of the racks, he never felt like it was the first days of a better nation, but he never felt like it was the last days of one, either.” 

Ah the sources code for Walkaway. When the end times come you really need motivated people who can get behind Try, Fail, Tray Again, Fail Better.

A violent looking Burning Man style image of a man with his cars the caption says You Know What Your Pretty Culture Gave Us? Gave Us Dirt and Fighting and Eating Each Other
A Song Before Sunset by David Grigg ★★★½☆ 
A painful look at the dying of cultural heritage in the post-apocalyptic world, and the troubling thought that maybe none of it had been worth the efforts.

Post Apocalyptic Wilderness Hike on the Highway
Salvage by Orson Scott Card ★★★☆☆ 
“Whenever things got scary in the world, a lot of Mormons moved home.” 

A group of Mormons live around the flooded shattered remains of Salt Lake City. Their memories and faith hold them there. The imagery of the metal scrawled prayers given to the temple below the lake was moving. 

Told from an outsiders perspective you can appreciate their faith while knowing it’s the past and tomorrow is elsewhere. 

An OK story but I expected more from the author of the Enderverse Series.

Gas Masked Man with a burned out city behind him the caption reads Memos from the Wasteland now with Activities
Still Life With Apocalypse by Richard Kadrey ★★★☆☆ 
Basically a snap-shot story of a world slowing failing, only the bureaucracy not giving up. It’s the way it failed that felt real. 

“TV cameras broadcast the riot live to a country so knotted with fury and tension that riots broke out from Maine to Hawaii. When the footage hit the satellites, riots spontaneously exploded around the world.” 

An image of Kiernan Shipka and Mason Dye as the characters from Flowers in the Attic the caption reads We're probably the only live people in the whole world
Mute by Gene Wolfe ★★★☆☆ 
Ah, that special end of the world moment when you get to slip into bed naked with your sister.

A Brightly Lit Circus at Night with the caption Sex Tacos Dangerous Drugs
Ginny Sweethips' Flying Circus by Neal Barrett, Jr. ★★★☆☆ 
A funny story about people making their way in peculiar fashion; a faux sex carnival operator and the mechanic with a crush on her.

A man and woman sitting on a railing looking out over a city
The End of the World as We Know It by Dale Bailey ★★★☆☆ 
“She's talking about Duty. She's talking about it because that's what you're supposed to talk about at times like this. But underneath that is sex. And underneath that, way down, is loneliness—and he has some sympathy for that...” 

The end of the world was a quiet sudden whisper of rot. The survivors find each other but can’t find the will to be human again.

Speech Sounds by Octavia Butler ★★★☆☆ 
“It happened just that simply, just that fast... And Rye was alone—with three corpses.” 
A slightly hopeful ending tacked onto a desolate, bloodthirsty landscape.

A woman rides a motorcycle through a prairie landscape with the caption 8 hours Phoenix to Sacramento
And The Deep Blue Sea by Elizabeth Bear ★★½☆☆ 
I have some appreciation for this bike through the badlands, real and imagined, but not for the rest. I did not understand what was in the case or how it could save a city. The character’s dire motivation felt more nihilistic than heroic.

How We Got In Town and Out Again by Jonathan Lethem ★★☆☆☆ 
A little unpleasant, a lot boring. To get admission into a town with little food, but somehow tons of computer equipment, contestants give up sleep to VR. 

Episode Seven: Last Stand Against the Pack In the Kingdom of the Purple Flowers by John Langan ★★☆☆☆ 
Well, that could have been great. I went back to the beginning to read the story within the story hoping for some novel twist. No luck. Which makes this story a lame kaiju, nothing more.

The People of Sand and Slag by Paolo Bacigalupi SKIP


I read 21/22 stories that averaged 3.4 stars

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