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Loading... This is the Way the World Endsby James Morrow
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Suffers from that particularly male premillenial obsession with sex, and also the dated nature of nuclear apocalypse worries. How many conversations do I need a book’s protagonist to have with his cum? Precisely zero. ( ) Probably one of the more interesting nuclear holocaust books you'll ever read, James Morrow takes on the concept that post-apocalypse stories are always told from the survivor's point of you and introduces a nuclear wasteland in which the last surviving human is forced to stand trial by the souls of all those lives ended and prevented by nuclear annihilation. Morrow has a talent for bringing philosophical and theological into a very physical world for contemplation and review, and this book is no exception. no reviews | add a review
A darkly comic tale of one survivor's unintended collaboration with the architects of a nuclear holocaust-and his surprising adventures in the post-apocalyptic world George Paxton is a simple man, happy enough with his job carving inscriptions on gravestones. All he needs is a high-tech survival garment-a scopas suit-to protect his beloved daughter in the event of nuclear Armageddon. But when George finally acquires the coveted suit, the deal comes with a catch: He must sign a sales contract admitting to his complicity in the nuclear arms race between the US and the Soviets. Inevitably, the bombs fall, and our hero finds himself imprisoned on a submarine headed for Antarctica, where he and five other survivors will stand trial for "crimes against humanity." George Paxton's accusers are no ordinary plaintiffs: They are "the unadmitted," potential people whose hypothetical lives were canceled in consequence of humankind's self-extinction. In the months that follow, George's dark journey will take him through the hellscape that was once the Earth, through a human past that has become as unthinkable as the human future, to his day in court before the South Pole tribunal, and finally into the intolerable heart of loss. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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