Diaries of the Disaster

Diaries of the Disaster is a name that has come into use referring to a series of short stories dealing with The End of the World as We Know It. Contributed to by a number of different authors, it begins with "The Lonely Void", in which a backyard tinkerer manages to make it off the planet Earth after it explodes…and then runs with it from there.

The Earth explodes, and Backyard Bob, who was laughed down when he predicted it, escapes. Meanwhile, the other survivors try and make for the Moon. Not all of them make it, and even fewer of them survive the resulting chaos. A posse of idealists leaves for Mars (the already-extant colonies of which get obliterated by a large chunk of Canada while they're traveling). Over the course of a few years, a small group of survivors manages to cobble together a generation ship. They launch, and it looks like Alpha Centauri is going to become the new home for mankind, almost three centuries hence.

…except that It Gets Worse. A group of Complete Monsters decides that they want to hoard resources for themselves, so they fake an inefficiency in the resource reclamation systems and end up causing the deaths of about three-quarters of the population on the ship for recycling…and they are perfectly willing to kill to keep their secrets.

In the middle of all this, there is another development. As it turns out, there actually were other survivors, scant and scattered though they be, in the Solar System, and the generation ship might not have needed to have been built in the first place. The story forks off on this tack, detailing the progress of the Martian terraformation project, thus ending up with two threads running in parallel.

"' antics incensed me enough to personally bash his head in. (The stain, incidentally, looks a little like Elvis.)"
 * Apocalyptic Log: Several, especially in the beginning.
 * Back From the Dead: claims this upon his return, though he didn't really die.
 * Blatant Lies: The news report of the death of Patrick Scott.
 * Corrupt Church: Though two of its officials actually aren't.
 * Determinator: Everybody, really, to some extent or another.
 * Driven to Suicide: The maintenance character in "Survivor's Guilt".
 * The End of the World as We Know It: The story starts like this.
 * Faking the Dead:.
 * Hearing Voices: Backyard Bob after blasting off.
 * Hoist By Their Own Petard: All the corrupt church officials are sent to the recyclers.
 * Hope Spot: The cloud detected in transit. Turns out it was.
 * Incredibly Lame Pun: The terraformation of Mars is described as "a project of astronomical proportions".
 * Info Dump: "Under the Crust", describing the terraformation plan.
 * It Got Worse
 * Laser-Guided Karma: is beat to death with a section of pipe that was used to kill another man on his orders.
 * Make It Look Like an Accident: Pastor Norton's death. Backyard Bob sees through it, though.
 * Meaningful Name: Arnold Benedict, who leaves a large portion of the populace in an orbital hotel so that he can escape.
 * To a lesser extent, Backyard Bob, nicknamed after the place where he did most of his tinkering.
 * Bishops Mallard and Young are Shout Outs to two of the series contributors.
 * Pastor Banquo Thomas Norton and his son Conor Fleance Norton. Also, Seward, Jr., who dies fighting.
 * Million-to-One Chance: Averted. Even though they knew that the generation ship would likely not be able to make the course correction, the contingent of survivors left in the Solar System sent a message to the ship, telling them that the remaining colonies would be more than happy to take them in.
 * Mood Whiplash: Nobody listened when Backyard Bob predicted the destruction of the Earth! He jury-rigs a spaceship to escape. It works! But nobody who was on the Earth survived…
 * This:

"This isn’t good. I just got a preliminary report from Chief Engineer Dutch. In order to survive we need to recycle everything. We took twice the consumables we thought we would need. We should achieve a 99.99% efficiency with our recycling. Dutch said we are actually only getting 99.7% over the past 90 days. If this rate doesn’t change we will run out in 181 years."
 * Nuclear Option: The terraformation of Mars requires restarting its magnetosphere. The approved plan calls for nukes.
 * Oh Crap: The initial journey was slated at two hundred seventeen years. Then:


 * This was also the general reaction to the fact that.
 * The realization that.
 * Retcon: Hobson was originally named Williams. The original story was reëdited after a subsequent user posted a sequel mistakenly referring to the captain as "Hobson".
 * Rouge Angles of Satin: Some egregious examples crop up on occasion.
 * Plot Hole: Just how exactly did Backyard Bob make it to Mars in a two-seater spaceship?
 * Shout-Out:
 * An important section of the plot is analogous to Macbeth.
 * The title of "Pay No Attention To That Man Behind The Curtain".
 * "The Matador"'s title is a reference to the movie version of Fail-Safe.
 * The name of one of the Chinese ships in the Asteroid Belt is Lán Tàiyáng, which translates to Blue Sun.
 * Time Skip: Several.
 * The first skip comes between the building and launching of the ship.
 * The Captain's Log goes from Ship's Day 007 to 113, and then the story shifts about three decades.
 * Together in Death: Captain Hobson volunteers to go to the recyclers because of his family.
 * Wham! Episode: Several.
 * There are survivors in the asteroid belt!
 * It was the Archbishop and his cronies (in-universe, anyway)!
 * It was the Archbishop and his cronies (in-universe, anyway)!