Earth Abides

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Earth Abides
Written by: George R. Stewart
Central Theme:
Synopsis:
Genre(s): Post-Apocalypse
First published: 1949
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A classic 1949 novel by George R. Stewart, which depicts the new tribal society which slowly arises in (the ruins of) Berkeley, California after most of humanity is wiped out by a viral plague. Features much rumination about ecology and human society. One of the first of the Cozy Catastrophe genre, and a major influence on Stephen King's novel The Stand.

Tropes used in Earth Abides include:
  • After the End
  • All Hail the Great God Mickey: One character knows that the ruins of the cities and bridges were built by people called "the Americans". He then wonders if the land and skies were built by the older Americans depicted on coins.
    • A society formed by the descendants of black sharecroppers still offers sacrifices of cotton to long-dead white landlords, though the sharecroppers themselves have no use for it.
  • Apocalypse How
  • Chekhov's Gun: Hiking in the Rocky Mountains researching for a paper he's writing, Isherwood Williams finds a hammer left by miners. He keeps it the whole time, and eventually the children of the tribe he founds see it as a holy relic and the symbol of leadership.
  • Cozy Catastrophe: Played straight, but also averted when the book's protagonist Isherwood Williams meets two people living the high life in New York City, and realizes they aren't equipped (in gear or mentality) to make it through the first winter.
    • The reservoir conveniently keeps delivering clean water to their houses for a long, long time before a pipe rusts out.
    • Somewhat averted with the other survivors Ish meets briefly, a composite family of semi-literate black share-croppers in the southern US. But for the death of those around them (including their landlords), their lives of subsistence farming are continuing just as before.
    • Completely averted until Ish leaves California. After being driven off by a cult near Los Angeles, the only even remotely friendly survivors he runs across are a Native American settlement outside Albuquerque ( from whom his sons are able to secure seed corn on a later trip), the sharecroppers mentioned above, and the couple in New York. Ish is without meaningful human companionship until after he returns from his trip (almost the first third of the book) when he meets Em.
  • Did Not Do the Research: Stewart has his protagonists continuing to eat canned goods after they've gone over - some canned goods continue to be edible for a long time, though they're not particularly palatable. Also gasoline has a shelf life, too.
    • As long as the can retains its integrity, canned goods can last more than a century (although their flavor and texture will leave something to be desired, they'll retain their nutrient content and remain safe to eat). And the leaded gasoline used in the 1940s had a much longer shelf-life than modern gasoline (although corrosion from the container it's held in will lead to contamination). The belts, seals, and tires in the vehicles Ish salvages...not so much. After about five years there should be nothing left driveable in this world even assuming the gasoline was usable.
  • New Eden
  • No Bikes in the Apocalypse: When the cars are gone, they hoof it.
  • Only the Chosen May Wield: To his surprise, Ish's hammer ends becoming this.
  • The Plague
  • Ruptured Appendix: Averted. When Isherwood lists things going in his favor for the apocalypse, the fact that he's already had his appendix out is #1.
  • Scavenger World
  • Slept Through the Apocalypse: The protagonist was hiking in the Rocky Mountains at the novel's opening, gets laid low by a rattlesnake bite, and returns to find the world has ended. The novel suggests that it was the snakebite itself that allowed Ish to survive the plague (while recovering from the bite, he suffers measle-like symptoms, and the plague is described as a kind of super-measles).
  • Time Marches On: They name every year that passes, by the time the book ends it's into what would be the 1980's, not that anyone's keeping track.
  • Wide-Eyed Idealist: Isherwood.
  • World Half Empty: What's left behind after the plague. Ish's Tribe, the only meaningful population center in what's left of San Francisco, consists of only a few dozen people (many of whom are his descendants) until decades after the Event when they merge with a similar group to the north.