Fishyboi Posted February 13, 2018 Posted February 13, 2018 Would prefer a nuclear apocalypse, but any kind is A-OK to me.
Raider5678 Posted February 13, 2018 Posted February 13, 2018 Rule of Thr3e trilogy is an amazing series. The power in the entire world goes out, and you get to follow the main characters as they try to rebuild society against rogue militaries, starvation, disease, and internal revolutions. 1
Fishyboi Posted February 14, 2018 Author Posted February 14, 2018 10 minutes ago, Raider5678 said: Rule of Thr3e trilogy is an amazing series. The power in the entire world goes out, and you get to follow the main characters as they try to rebuild society against rogue militaries, starvation, disease, and internal revolutions. That sounds pretty cool! Any more info on it?
Raider5678 Posted February 14, 2018 Posted February 14, 2018 (edited) 11 minutes ago, Fishyboi said: That sounds pretty cool! Any more info on it? Rule of Three by Eric Walters. All three books have been published. Each around 400 pages. First one follows the initial creation of the city state. The second one follows an internal coup attempt against the city states rulers. The third one follows a war breaking out between the city state and a rouge army. https://www.amazon.com/Rule-Three-Eric-Walters/dp/0374355029 Edited February 14, 2018 by Raider5678
Fishyboi Posted February 14, 2018 Author Posted February 14, 2018 Just now, Raider5678 said: Rule of Three by Eric Walters. All three books have been published. Each around 400 pages. First one follows the initial creation of the city-state. The second one follows an internal coup attempt against the city-states rulers. The third one follows a war breaking out between the city-state and a rogue army. Wow, that sounds very interesting. It might give me some inspiration, but I'll have to read more into it to find out!
Moontanman Posted February 14, 2018 Posted February 14, 2018 This book is one of my long time favs. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiero's_Journey
Fishyboi Posted February 14, 2018 Author Posted February 14, 2018 18 minutes ago, Moontanman said: This book is one of my long time favs. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiero's_Journey Ooohhh, I may try that soon. I haven't seen many books on nuclear apocalypses, other than Fallout and all those AAA titles. It's a type of apocalypse not many indie games I know about use or talk about, other than Nuclear Throne of course, but we don't know what kind of nuclear apocalypse. The apocalypse genre helps me understand survival a bit more, since I could put that to use in my own stories.
Raider5678 Posted February 14, 2018 Posted February 14, 2018 20 minutes ago, Fishyboi said: The apocalypse genre helps me understand survival a bit more, since I could put that to use in my own stories. 1 Ah, alright. My series focuses more on the human psychology aspect of an apocalypse then the actual apocalypse.
Fishyboi Posted February 14, 2018 Author Posted February 14, 2018 2 minutes ago, Raider5678 said: Ah, alright. My series focuses more on the human psychology aspect of an apocalypse then the actual apocalypse. Hey, who said it can't do that too? I look for that too.
studiot Posted February 14, 2018 Posted February 14, 2018 Greybeard https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greybeard
studiot Posted February 14, 2018 Posted February 14, 2018 The Postman : David Brin Lord of the Flies : William Golding On the beach : Neville Shute 1
Fishyboi Posted February 14, 2018 Author Posted February 14, 2018 3 hours ago, studiot said: Greybeard https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greybeard That sounds like a dark plot. An ageing population devoid of children.
Intrigued Posted April 23, 2019 Posted April 23, 2019 This one, winner of the 1961 Hugo, is difficult to beat: Walter Miller's A Canticle for Leibowitz. Nuclear war, as per your preference, and millenia spanning timescale.
peterwlocke Posted April 23, 2019 Posted April 23, 2019 (edited) On 2/13/2018 at 3:50 PM, Raider5678 said: Rule of Thr3e trilogy is an amazing series. The power in the entire world goes out, and you get to follow the main characters as they try to rebuild society against rogue militaries, starvation, disease, and internal revolutions. yes i love it the cliffhanger killed me thought like please make more. the grenades and all the chlorine was so funny but the dad comeing back was not very good in my opnion. Edited April 23, 2019 by peterwlocke
marrystalbergerdmz81 Posted August 30, 2022 Posted August 30, 2022 On 2/14/2018 at 1:50 AM, Raider5678 said: Rule of Thr3e trilogy is an amazing series. The power in the entire world goes out, and you get to follow the main characters as they try to rebuild society against rogue militaries, starvation, disease, and internal revolutions. sounds good
Ken Fabian Posted August 31, 2022 Posted August 31, 2022 (edited) Not sure they are precisely post-apocalyptic - more like set within ongoing regional disasters rather than total apocalypse, but I was impressed by the climate and bio-engineering catastrophes of Paolo Bacigalupi. Scarily plausible on some fronts - Arizona, Nevada and California warring over water whilst fighting off the waves of despised climate refugees... that keep coming from Texas (in "The Water Knife"), so desperate even heads hung on razor wire fences don't deter them. Living with the rampant diseases of crops that came out of the bio-labs of competing global food companies - the "calorie companies" - with bioengineered humans slipping their leashes in "The Windup Girl". The dystopian SE (formerly) USA with sea level rise, Cat 6 hurricanes and scavenging of raw materials the principle industry (scrap for guns and bullets) as brutal militias made up mostly of forced child recruits war against "traitors" (other militias) after the Chinese peacekeepers give up trying to help, take their supersoldiers and leave them to it - in the Shipbreaker trio ("Shipbreaker", "The Drowned Cities", "Tool"). As bad as the climate disasters are it is the human responses to it that make it horrific. Edited August 31, 2022 by Ken Fabian 1
Sensei Posted September 1, 2022 Posted September 1, 2022 Quote Any good post-apocalyptic books? Yet to be written.. after the event..
TheVat Posted September 1, 2022 Posted September 1, 2022 The Road, by Cormac McCarthy (bleak as hell, powerful) Oryx and Crake, by Margaret Atwood (wit, humor, deep perception of human nature, utter command of the science.... Atwood is a genius) Cell, by Stephen King (just bizarre, but well told story) I am Legend, by Richard Matheson (true classic, a master storyteller) Blindness, by Jose Saramago (one of the books that earned him a Nobel Prize) Lucifer's Hammer, by Niven and Pournelle (are there any Larry Niven novels, or co-written novels, that aren't pageturners and huge fun? I'm unaware of them, if so.) The Windup Girl, which @Ken Fabian mentioned, struck me as amazingly ambitious yet I found myself not connecting and dropping it after a few chapters. Not sure why, but it is sad when brilliant books go unread so I might check it out again. The Fifth Season, by NK Jemisin. Utterly original!
iNow Posted September 1, 2022 Posted September 1, 2022 4 minutes ago, TheVat said: The Road, by Cormac McCarthy (bleak as hell, powerful) Came here to say the same thing. Just finished rereading it again a few weeks ago. 1
Ken Fabian Posted September 2, 2022 Posted September 2, 2022 11 hours ago, TheVat said: The Windup Girl, which @Ken Fabian mentioned, struck me as amazingly ambitious yet I found myself not connecting and dropping it after a few chapters. Not sure why, but it is sad when brilliant books go unread so I might check it out again. Probably one of Bacigalupi's least "real" stories. A lot of SF looks like fantasy to me and The Windup Girl tends towards the more fantastic. I generally find his bioengineering ideas less believable than the climate change and disparate ways nations and people cope or don't cope but I think they do make for good stories. "The Water Knife" was the one I found most plausible seeming - and is probably the most near future of them, apart from his contempory not-SF "The Doubt Factory". Which is amongst his more direct commentaries.
markspenser Posted September 30, 2022 Posted September 30, 2022 (edited) I'm reading Station Eleven, and it's pretty interesting book. It's about life before and after a fictional swine flu pandemic. I've read little less than a half, but I like it Edited September 30, 2022 by markspenser
Doctor Derp Posted September 30, 2022 Posted September 30, 2022 Seven Eves by Neal Stephenson was ok. Although I don't know how people would feel about the scientific aspects of the story.
Moontanman Posted September 30, 2022 Posted September 30, 2022 On 9/1/2022 at 12:20 PM, iNow said: Came here to say the same thing. Just finished rereading it again a few weeks ago. Dystopian for sure! My son gave me the book to read and it prompted us to see the movie. We both cried at the end of the movie!
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