Submitted by sadlegbeard t3_10o5n9p in books
This easily just became one of my favorite books. I have always been a huge fan of the survival genre, post-apocalyptic stuff, whatever you want to call it. I’ve searched the web high and low for years and somehow, this one never came up.
It is fantastic and if survival, nuclear war, and/or the Atomic Age are of interest to you then I can’t recommend this enough.
I’m quickly learning I have got to stop reading reviews on Goodreads for books I like. It does seem like a lot of people have unreasonable expectations going into this…it was published in 1959. Yes, there’s racism and misogyny. It was published in 1959. I don’t understand why people seem baffled and offended that a book is a product of its time. I honestly don’t know what else to say about it. It’s frustrating to me that so many people would cast this book aside because of that alone.
Also, I think in comparing Alas, Babylon to modern post-apocalyptic novels you can see a clear divide. This book does start off slow and there’s a lot of build-up to The Day. Personally, I enjoyed this. I love seeing people go about their daily lives, business as usual, the signs that something is coming are subtle and easily missed. I like seeing who people are before we get to the after. Most modern books leave this out, which I guess there’s a demand for, since a lot of reviews really gripe over it.
In fact, my copy of the book was from Goodwill and there’s a page that was left dog-eared, presumably where someone stopped…and it’s literally about a page and a half before the nukes start. Haha. I’m just gonna say…instant gratification has done people no favors.
gxbcab t1_j6d4fo0 wrote
Alas, Babylon is one of my favorite dystopian novels. I think it’s what gave me the longing to one day fuck off to a farm in the middle of nowhere.