A Practical Fiction List for Surviving After the Apocalypse

shelved under Sci Fi & Fantasy and Self-Help

Tsunamis in the Pacific... global climate change... devastating earthquakes... the year 2012 looming on the horizon... it's no wonder that the apocalypse has been on a lot of minds lately. But if you’re one of the (un)lucky ones to survive the actual big event, then what should you do? As usual, we turn to books for the answer. I selected the following (flashlight worthy) novels for their focus on what comes after the end, rather than the end itself. They attempt to answer the all-important question: Now what?

(Note that books that depict unlikely events following the apocalypse — say, showdowns with the Devil... or attacks by roving zombie hordes — have been omitted. C'mon, we're interested in practical survival guides.)

 

Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse

edited by John Joseph Adams

This collection of short stories is a retrospective of possible post-apocalyptic scenarios, ranging from the immediate aftermath to far, far in the future. While a few horror and dark fantasy stories have been thrown in the mix, most of these excellent selections are straightforward science fiction depicting various ways of coping with the end of everything.

 

The Road

by Cormac McCarthy

In what is probably the bleakest of titles here, a man and his son wander through a desolated landscape of ashes, eking out their survival from the little that’s left remaining, while trying to get — for lack of a better destination — "South".

 

Parable of the Sower

by Octavia E. Butler

Society has completely collapsed, and a young woman is driven from her home after her neighborhood is burned and her family murdered. Despite the violence and hopelessness that surrounds her, she is determined to spread her spiritual message.

 

Lucifer's Hammer

by Jerry Pournelle, Larry Niven

A comet has slammed into the Earth, destroying all governing structures, and within weeks all of the survivors have reverted to feudalism, cannibalism and worse. Fun times. (Editor's Note: Any serious reader has a few books they return to on a regular basis. Some of these books are classics and some of them are... books on surviving a comet strike. Yep, Lucifer's Hammer is one of those books I've read... oh, I don't know. 5 times?)

 

Alas, Babylon

by Pat Frank

The residents of a small Florida town, having been alerted just prior to an all-out nuclear war, must struggle with the vagaries of small-town politics after the apocalypse.

 

The Postman

by Antonio Skármeta, translated by Katherine Silver

When the end of America comes, what is the one thing that can bring us back from the brink of complete anarchy? That’s right: the U.S. Postal Service.

 

A Gift Upon the Shore

by M. K. Wren

Once the apocalypse is over with, two women survive on a farm on the Oregon coast while trying to preserve the remainder of mankind’s knowledge and sparring with the ultra-Christian religious cult down the beach.

 

The Folk of the Fringe

by Orson Scott Card

Following World War III, a community of Mormons is one of the few pockets of order remaining in the U.S., trying to rebuild society on the shores of a flooded Salt Lake City.

 

A Canticle for Leibowitz

by Walter M. Miller Jr.

Six hundred years after the Simplification — total nuclear annihilation — a cloister of monks in Utah preserve the little that remains of the world’s knowledge, and wonder whether mankind is perpetually doomed to destroy itself.

 

Earth Abides

by George R. Stewart

One of the few survivors of a plague attempts to rebuild society but instead must watch it erode to a primitive state.

 

Always Coming Home

by Ursula K. Le Guin

It's the far, far future, and the only remnants of the past are a network of computers. This book collects the stories, poetry and rituals of the Kesh, who have built a primitive utopia on the ashes of civilization.