Wastelands 2 - More Stories of the Apocalypse
3.5/5
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About this ebook
John Joseph Adams
John Joseph Adams is the series editor of The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy and the editor of the Hugo Award–winning Lightspeed, and of more than forty anthologies, including Lost Worlds & Mythological Kingdoms, The Far Reaches, and Out There Screaming (coedited with Jordan Peele).
Read more from John Joseph Adams
Other Worlds Than These Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Futures & Fantasies Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Nightmare Magazine, Issue 78 (March 2019) Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Way of the Wizard Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Lightspeed: Year One Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Lightspeed Magazine, Issue 106 (March 2019) Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsRobot Uprisings Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Federations Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Lightspeed Magazine, Issue 112 (September 2019) Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Wastelands 2 - More Stories of the Apocalypse
335 ratings28 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5What better way to spend the day than by reading about the apocalypse. So many good writers, so much more to read based on this anthology. I found new authors to look into and came across some old ones I might want to return to!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Excellent anthology of post apocalyptic fiction. I enjoyed these, almost without exception.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A collection of quite high-quality shorts. Definitely worth the price of admission.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This work is a collection of post-apocalyptic short stories, by some of the greatest science fiction and horror writers of the 20th century. Each story is sufficiently long to engage the reader’s attention, yet easily readable in well under an hour. While they vary somewhat in quality, all were enjoyable, and a few were very good.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Usually, if you're lucky, anthologies have a couple of gems mixed in with the filler.
This book is an exception - it is truly exceptional. Kudos to the editor - this is a truly A-list group of authors, contributing excellent stories. Nearly all are top-notch. Highly recommended. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Like another reviewer has said, I'm not really a short story fan...... usually. I am however, a fan of post apocalyptic/end of the world/last man standing type fiction, so chose this book hoping to find a few good stories to tide me over until I found my next 'currently reading'.
The stories have been well selected and although they all follow a similar subject matter, they're all so different and even the very, very short stories stay with you after you've read them. It was interesting to find a few new takes on the genre and for this reason I'm glad I read 'Wastelands'. These stories have helped me find a few new branches to head along and broaden the subject for me.
This is the perfect book to have by your bedside, for those times when you only want to dip into a book....but be warned, even with the best intentions of "I'll just read one story to wind down before I drift off" can turn into ".....maybe I'll just read one more little story THEN I'll call it a night......or perhaps just a couple more....."
This is a great book for anyone familiar with the genre, but equally if you're new to this type of subject it's a gentle lead in to some of the best SF writers around.
What I really liked was the index at the end which gives further suggested reading lists. All books should come as standard with one of these. I had already found and devoured most of the further reading list given, but there were a couple that have now been added to my 'to be read' list.
Get this book whether you're familiar with the subject and looking for new paths or you're new to the subject and looking to explore it. There's something for everyone here. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5About a year and a half ago, I was asked what my favorite book was. Unable to answer such a broad question, I responded that I have a favorite genre of books, and that is the dystopia genre.
Going hand in hand with dystopia is the form of post-apocalyptic stories of what happens when the world ends. I've read dozens of these stories, and never get tired of it. How did the world end? Who's left? How do they live? Do they help or hurt each other? I eat this stuff up.
So obviously, a book like this one, "Stories of the Apocalypse" is more than perfect for me. This is a collection of short stories, only two of the authors are people I've heard of before (King and Doctorow), but almost every story in this collection is solid.
My top two:
1. "The End of the World as We Know It" by Dale Bailey is superb. A local UPS delivery man wakes up one morning to find everyone is dead. Everyone. So, he does what he hasn't been able to do before: sit around and drink, watching sunsets and thinking to himself. This story is uniquely told in that it also describes the history of apocalyspe stories--a very worthy tale.
2. "The End of the Whole Mess" by Stephen King. We all know I heart my the King. And was surprised to see that this story was written in '86 (the 80s were the best for him, I think). This is the first story in the collection (starting off strong). A writer and his genious brother pollute the Earth with a purified water that was designed to calm people the eff down...and it does, but also makes them kinda lose their mind. The kicker: The narrator is typing away as quickly as possible, trying to get the story of What Went Wrong on paper before he himself succumbs to the disease.
But that is by no means the only good ones in this novel. It's a quality read. I only had a few issues with the entire book:
1. Why would you *start* with Stephen King? (I'd shove him somewhere in the middle)
2. There were THREE typos, in three different stories, where a person was talking and quotation marks* were omitted (but shouldn't have been). Ex: "We need to go," Adam was telling me before they get here." Three instances exactly like that--bad editor!
3. In Cory Doctorow's story, at the beginning of the story, his wife and SON die (only child)...then toward the end, Doctorow is too confused or too lazy to remember that the child was a boy, and writes that the "beautiful wife and beautiful daughter" are dead....that's aggrevating.
*Footnote: Thank you for correcting me, Mark! (Gotta give credit where it's due yo!* - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Excellent collection. More often than not the stories were above-par and extraordinarily interesting.
'The End of the World As We Know It' was on that stood out as particularly exceptional. A very different and wonderful take on apocalyptic fiction.
The biggest weakness of the collection was starting out with an absolutely fantastic Stephen King story and then moving into what I considered the worst of the stories. Of course this allowed the editor to move back up in quality and end on a high-note.
Otherwise - fantastic. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5READ THIS BOOK. It says it gathers together the best post-apocalyptic literature of the past two decades and it so totally does.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5If you're looking for a good, solid anthology of post-apocalyptic short stories, then this book is awesome. I've seen complaints that this book is too sci-fi or not sci-fi enough or that the stories aren't well fleshed out, and I think it's unfair. This is a collection of short stories, not a collection of novellas, and to be honest, I like that the stories don't tend to focus on what caused the end of the world; I want the reactions of the people and what happens to the lives in that world.
Most of these stories are very well written. Yes, some of them have a political bent, but I think that the post-apocalyptic sub-genre is inherently political since much of it involves societies, why they fall, how they react to extreme stress and how they form (or don't).
Like any anthology, this series has its highs and lows. I think that the stories in this book were largely good, off-setting any not-so-great stories.
My favorites were:
"The People of Sand and Slag" by Paolo Bacigalupi
"Dark, Dark Were the Tunnels" George R R Martin
"Judgment Passed" by Jerry Oltion
"Speech Sounds" by Octavia Butler
and
"The End of the World as we Know it" by Dale Bailey (My favorite, perfectly written)
I did not like three stories. Coincidentally, the first two stories ("The End of the Whole Mess" by Stephen King and "Salvage" by Orson Scott Card) were two of the three I did not enjoy, and when I started the book I was really disappointed, thinking that I had made a drastic error in picking up this book. Luckily other stories make up for the bad start quickly. The story I liked the least was one I was really looking forward to after reading the introduction, "Episode Seven..." by John Langan. It was written as a kind of "answer" to Bailey's story, but the style of narration and the stream of consciousness writing did not work for me and distracted greatly from the story.
My only real complaint was that I don't think "Mute," by Gene Wolfe, should have been included. I think the story is absolutely fantastic and loved it, but I don't feel it belongs in this anthology because it is not post-apocalyptic, but pure horror (about Death, not a post apocalyptic world in any way). - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The end of the world is supposed to be fun. Stories of the apocalypse allow a certain dark form of escapism. They allow the reader to indulge in a fantasy life the same way classic thrillers, mysteries, westerns and romances do. Throw all the weapons you can find into the RV, take to the road one step ahead of the zombie apocalypse, or the bio-engineered plague, or the traumatic breakdown of civilization's infrastructure, or devastating climate change, or nuclear war, or alien invasion. It's a nightmare, but it's also an adventure.
In post-apocalyptic fiction, the societal rules we follow day to day are suspended. Everything is new. We must recreate ourselves. If we are to survive, the self we must become is one that fulfills a certain fantasy life we think we'd like a chance to live. No more nine-to-five, no more bills to pay, no more red-tape to stand in our way. Just our own will to live.
John Adams, the editor of Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse understands this. From his introduction:
What is it that draws us to those bleak landscapes--the wastelands of post-apocalyptic literature? To me, the appeal is obvious: it fulfills our taste for adventure, the thrill of discovery, the desire for a new frontier. It also allows us to start over from scratch, to wipe the slate clean and see what the world may have been like if we had known then what we know now.
I agree with Mr. Adams here, but I'd take this thought a step further. Stories of post-apocalyptic life allow us to explore just how bad things might turn out too, in spite of knowing what we now know. Take Margaret Atwood's novel The Handmaid's Tale for example. Part of the fun of reading The Handmaid's Tale is the chance to see just what life would be like if a certain group of people were allowed to recreate the world to suit their own vision of what it should be. Ms. Atwood's dystopia is not one many of us would choose to live in, but reading about it gives us a chance to see what it would be like, to see just how bad things could get. I see this as a form of escapist reading. Like many of the post apocalyptic stories in Wastelands, the reader is not given a world to escape into but a world to escape from. Instead of fleeing our own lives for a fictional one, we flee the fiction for reality. Either way, we escape.
There's much more than that going on in The Handmaid's Tale, and in the stories in Mr. Adam's anthology, but he's right at heart. The destruction of the world always brings about a new one in its wake. A chance to start again. It can't help but be an adventure. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5An anthology of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic short stories. As is usually the case with anthologies, I found some of these more satisfying than others, although all of them were well-written. A surprising number of them have only very lightly sketched-out apocalyptic settings, which was sometimes disappointing, and several left me wondering quite what the point was supposed to be. But the best of them are wonderfully original and memorable, making the book as a whole feel well worth my time.
The highlights:
"The People of Sand and Slag" by Paolo Bacigalipi. This one, which features indestructible people living happily in a toxic landscape, seriously got under my skin. I found it incredibly depressing and bleak, mostly because the characters have only the faintest inkling of what they've lost, and no idea of how depressing and bleak it is.
"When Sysadmins Ruled the Earth" by Cory Doctorow, about a group of computer nerds keeping the internet up while the rest of the world is collapsing, was admittedly a bit ridiculous, but it entertained me greatly with its geekiness.
"Judgment Passed" by Jerry Oltion introduces us to a small group of people, mostly agnostics, who have apparently missed the Christian Rapture by not being on the planet at the time. Religious folks might be justifiably annoyed at this one, but atheistic me couldn't help enjoying it.
"Speech Sounds" by Octavia Butler. In this story, the civilization-destroying plague robs people of the power of speech, making it probably the most creatively horrific doomsday scenario in the collection.
And "The End of the World As We Know It" by Dale Bailey. This one is a sort of meta-end-of-the-world story that skillfully reminds us that the world is always ending for somebody. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Just as the title implies, this anthology compiles apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic stories by authors such as Stephen King, Octavia E. Butler, Gene Wolf, Orson Scott Card, and others (most of the authors have published apocalyptic novels of some sort). While all the stories deal with the same subject matter, the form of apocalypse varies vastly, as does the tone, which can range from terrifying to despondent to hopeful.
Because the collection features well-established authors, the quality of writing is consistent throughout. Though certain stories did not appeal to me for one reason or another, this had to do with my taste preferences rather than the skill of the author, and in general, I enjoyed reading it. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The premise: ganked from BN.com: Famine, Death, War, and Pestilence: The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, the harbingers of Armageddon - these are our guides through the Wastelands . . .
From the Book of Revelation to The Road Warrior; from A Canticle for Leibowitz to The Road, storytellers have long imagined the end of the world, weaving eschatological tales of catastrophe, chaos, and calamity. In doing so, these visionary authors have addressed one of the most challenging and enduring themes of imaginative fiction: the nature of life in the aftermath of total societal collapse.
Gathering together the best post-apocalyptic literature of the last two decades from many of today's most renowned authors of speculative fiction - including George R.R. Martin, Gene Wolfe, Orson Scott Card, Carol Emshwiller, Jonathan Lethem, Octavia E. Butler, and Stephen King - Wastelands explores the scientific, psychological, and philosophical questions of what it means to remain human in the wake of Armageddon. Whether the end of the world comes through nuclear war, ecological disaster, or cosmological cataclysm, these are tales of survivors, in some cases struggling to rebuild the society that was, in others, merely surviving, scrounging for food in depopulated ruins and defending themselves against monsters, mutants, and marauders.
Complete with introductions and an indispensable appendix of recommendations for further reading, Wastelands delves into this bleak landscape, uncovering the raw human emotion and heart-pounding thrills at the genre's core.
My Rating: It's a Gamble: This is a hard book to rate, because I'm not rating a unified story, but how 22 different stories all work together in a collection. When I first started reading the anthology, I was really into it, despite some stories not being to my taste; however, as I read on, I got more impatient, more bored, and more picky with each piece. In truth, I think this anthology might've been better served by cutting 5 or 6 stories, because after reading 22 post-apocalyptic stories in a row, I found the theme falling flat. One fix, though, since this isn't 5-6 stories shorter, is to space out your reading, making sure you're reading unrelated books/stories between every two or three from this anthology. That might make the anthology feel fresher, but regardless, there are some stories I would've been happy to see cut. Adams' debut effort as an anthologist (this was his first anthology, right?) is overall a solid one, though if you average all my star ratings, the book ends up with 3.22 stars on a 5 star scale. There are some obvious typos that I wish had been caught, but on the plus side, "For Further Reading" in the back is a great resource for readers wanting to explore more of the post-apocalyptic genre (though I disagree with the inclusion of The Handmaid's Tale, which I feel is more dystopia than post-apocalyptic). I'm glad I read it though, and won't be adverse to trying out Adams' anthologies in the future, particularly his dystopia-focused Brave New Worlds.
Spoilers, yay or nay?: Nay. There's no point in spoiling short stories. Indeed, it's quite evil. Instead, you'll get a blow-by-blow on each story, but NO SPOILERS. The full review is at my blog, and as always, comments and discussion are most welcome.
REVIEW: WASTELANDS edited by John Joseph Adams
Happy Reading! - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5A very mixed bag indeed. The best are indeed very good (my personal favourite was the very first one - The End of the Whole Mess by Stephen King, which truly creeped me out. But too many were distinctly pointless, even weak. A stronger editorial hand was definitely required!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5For anyone interested in the post-apocalyptic or dystopian genre this is a great addition to your collection. All of the stories contained were at minimum 3 stars worth. Many were much better than average. The editor also includes a list of recommended reading for those interested in this genre which (while will eventually be outdated) was a very nice touch. Great collection and highly recommended.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A nifty little book of 22 short stories detailing different views of what our world might look like after life as we know it ends, and just few people survive. While you might think these are horror stories, the authors bring reality and a sense of "yes, it could happen this way.." to them.
My favorite is Stephen King's "The End of the Whole Mess"......a tribute to the saying that the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
"When Sysadmins Ruled the Earth" by Cory Doctorow, gives great insight to how these people are so necessary to todays society, and how we rarely, if ever, think them........until there is a problem.
"Bread and Bombs" , written by M. Rickert, is based on a true incident, and just makes you sad.
"Arties Angels, by Catherine Wells, is haunting.....and inspiring.
"The End of the World as We Know it", by Dale Bailey, just reads 'real'.
Who know how we will react when the end does come? If you like this genre, this is a great read. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Very awesome collection of stories! My sweetheart found this book and bought it for me...knowing my love of post-apocalyptic fiction...and I really enjoyed it! Looking at it now I am going to add it to my re-read pile and add a better review after a revisit it. I do remember that it began with "The End of the Whole Mess" by Stephen King, a story I really like and have read many times. I recently relieved that this another compilation by John Joseph Adams, as is The Living Dead. Small world!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5It would go to far to review every single story here, just want to say that this is quite a fantastic little collection, brilliant stories, all sorts of scenarios after the big whatever: war, virus, environmental collapse - a couple maybe not quite so great but on the whole a very good compilation. The book also includes short bios of the authors, so you can put the books of your favourites straight onto your shopping list.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This anthology of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic tales is fantastically bleak, enjoyable, readable fare; small masterworks of the contributing authors who rise to, and above, the challenges of this theme. While none of the stories are unique to this volume, Stephen King’s story The End of the Whole Mess is the only one I’d read before, and I was delighted to find that it heralds an equally strong 21 tales, and – a rather nice touch - a ‘further reading’ list of novels in the genre at the back.
I will briefly mention my favourite stories (barring the King, because I’m a constant reader which more or less equals ‘biased fangirl’): The People of Sand and Slag by Paolo Bacigalupi is a sad and gut-churning little tale of the end of humanity, despite the tech-evolutionary advantages that have ensured its survival…like so much of the genre, this is one to think on for a while after reading. The last tale in the book, Episode Seven: Last Stand Against the Pack in the Kingdom of Purple Flowers by John Langan is a fabulous read with a nice shivery imagery running through it; like the earlier The End of the World as we Know it by Dale Bailey, this one has a slight tongue-in-cheek meta-fiction feel, but as the author says ‘I admired what he’d [Bailey] achieved, but I also felt a bit of rivalry, a desire to show that no everyone would roll over and go gently into that good night’. I found Mute by Gene Wolfe quite frightening, the premise of Judgement Passed by Jerry Oltion amusing and unnerving by turns.
This is one not only one of my favourite sci-fi volumes, but my favourite collection of short stories by multiple contributors… so often these are hampered by ‘filler’ or weaker stories and I cannot emphasise enough how even the stories that I didn’t enjoy as much as the best ones, left me wanting to explore their particular take on the end of the world in more detail making this collection an apocalyptic powerhouse of ways to end the world. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5For a retrospective of the post-apocalyptic story — and of the best contemporary science fiction and horror authors dabbling in the sub-genre — you can’t do much better than this collection. In most anthologies, you might expect to find a couple of excellent stories, a couple of clunkers and many just middling. But Wastelands contains more than a fair number of excellent stores, and not a clunker among them. The story styles range from hard SF to haunted-house horror, from meta-fiction to urban fantasy. These authors examine post-apocalyptic surviving from every angle, from the religious to the post-human to the mundane.
While some selections may be familiar to many readers — such as Stephen King’s “The End of the Whole Mess” and Orson Scott Card’s “Salvage”, which open the volume — Wastelands also may introduce you to many new authors. Stand-outs include “The People of Sand and Slag” by Paolo Bacigalupi, a chilling portrayal of post-humanism; “The Last of the O-Forms” by James Van Pelt, a story of genetic mutation in the style of Ray Bradbury; “Speech Sounds” by Octavia Butler, which posits the loss of human language; “Killers” by Carol Emshwiller, a dark tale of survival following an endless war; and probably my favorite, “The End of the World as We Know It,” a slyly metafictional piece that pays homage to the sub-genre as a whole. But as I said, there is not a clunker here — every story in Wastelands is definitely worth reading. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I really enjoyed this collection of post-apocalyptic short stories. Some I've read before, but all was well written.
The End of the Whole Mess -Stephen King. A cure for man's bad behavior might also be its down fall. Its well written, enjoyable characters. Stephen King knows how to write a short story.
Salvage - Orson Scott Card. I read this in Folk of the Fringe. I didn't like it then, and skipped it.
The People of Sand and Slag - Paolo Bacigalupi - This is another story I've read. This story sticks with you - I think its the only story in this anthology where humanity lost its humanity to survive.
Bread and Bombs - M. Rickert - I think the story was too vague about exactly who what was going on and why the new family was hated. I didn't really enjoy it.
How We Got In Town and Out Again - Jonathan Lethem. Another story I've read. Its well written, typical two teens trying to survive together. The endurance race with internet is a nice touch :)
Dark, Dark Were The Tunnels - George R.R. Martin. Spacing fairing man comes back to earth and finds evolved/devolved humanity in tunnels and doesn't understand.
Waiting for the Zephyr - Tobias S. Buckell. Humanity is the mend, girl trying to find a better life against the wishes of her parents. Well written, quite light.
Never Despair - Jack McDevitt - Again, humanity is on the mend, starting to explore. One of these explorers, treasure hunters, meets an artificial intelligence, temporarily turned on.
When Sysadmins Ruled the Earth - Cory Doctorow. This story is scary. It takes place in the now, and one of the few stories where the apocalypse actually happens. Nice touch adding Google to the story.
The Last of the O-Forms - James Van Pelt. Scary story about something mixing DNA to form strange new creatures. Unfortunately, this isn't plausible. The story is good, but it doesn't make sense. Most of the creatures would have a short, short life or dead before born.
Still Life with Apocalypse - Richard Kadrey. When the world ends, how to pick up the pieces. Is it meaningful?
Artie's Angels - Catherine Wells. A wonderful story about the last of humanity, the poor, the unskilled, trying to survive as the rich and powerful take off too other worlds. King Arther inspires these characters.
Judgement Passed - Jerry Oltion. Astronauts come back to earth and find that they are left behind after Revelation. Are they meant to repopulate the earth, was it God? This is a very thought provoking story.
Mute - Gene Wolfe. I'm not sure its post-apoclyptic. It feels more like the kids are in purgatory. I'm not sure if it should have been included in this collection. The story is well written though.
Inertia - Nancy Kress. Is a disfiguring illness also a blessing to humanity in disguise? Another well written story that should not be missed.
And The Deep Blue Sea - Elizabeth Bear. The world is a radiation filled hell hole. The main character sells her soul to the Devil for a meaningful employment, but when he comes calling, she needs to make a choice.
Speech Sounds - Octavia Butler. A truly moving story about a devastating illness that takes away a persons ability to communicate. This story made me almost cry. But, there is hope at the end.
Killers - Carol Emshwiller. A twisty little story about life where the fight for terrorism is brought to the home front. Along with climate change, we meet a lady in a community that Seems to be holding its own and its own humanity...
Ginny Sweethips' Flying Circus - This is a humorous take on post-apocalyptic story. Includes suspicious androids, a gun happy possum, and a mechanic in love, with a side of poker. Fun story.
The End of the World As We Know It - The world ends, but not the way its portrayed in TV. The last known survivors, a man and woman also survive, but not to go forth and be fruitful.
A Song Before Sunset - David Grigg. Culture goes away, bye bye piano, libraries, art gallery. Quite typical.
Episode Seven: Against the Pack in the Kingdom of the Purple Flower. This story makes you breathless. A young man and a young pregnant woman on the run from something. But, someone is hiding a secret... - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A great anthology of post-apocalyptic fiction. The wonderful entries more than made up for the couple that didn't work very well for me.
On the plus side: the geeky delight of Doctorow's When Sysadmins Ruled The Earth, the brutal bizarreness of Bacigalupi's The People of Sand and Slag, the respectively silent and lightless worlds of Butler's Speech Sounds and Martin's Dark, Dark Were the Tunnels, and Bailey's meta-analysis-peppered The End of the World as We Know It.
On the minus: the Mormon factor in Card's Salvage didn't do much for me (it struck me as very "Apocalypse--Now with 100% more Mormons!"). Also, the breathless style of Langan's Episode Seven just plain wore me out. If its page-spanning sentences (lots of parentheses, commas, dashes) were meant to create a rushed stream-of-consciousness feel, I suppose it succeeded. It worked extremely well at the very end, but the first 90% of the story were exhausting to read.
Prospective readers should note that not all of the stories are action-y, lone-survivor stories, or set in the midst of an occurring apocalypse. While some do fit that bill, most are set in a world where the eradication was not so near-total. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse is a collections of short stories dealing with the aftermath of the end of the world. As is usual with anthologies some were interesting others not so much. The Stephen King contribution had been made into a TV episode, so it was familiar before I'd gone more than a paragraph. Octavia Butler's contribution was also haunting, but from the descriptions I'm not sure I'd like her other novels. I don't have the book with me at the moment, so I can't really point out the others I found interesting. There were a couple that I found rather distasteful. One involved genetically changed humans that were in effect no longer human. I hope that sort of future would never come to pass. If we're willing to sacrifice our reverence for life, then I hope I don't survive to that future.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A brilliant collection. The future is full of possiblities, but these are tales of darker imaginings. Some of the most renowned authors give their own spin on what happens after the End. Some speculate that humanity would survive the collapse of civilisation, others question what we would become. Although the Apocalypse might arrive in many different ways, these stories offer hope and a warning to appreciate what we have now. A great read for any forward thinking person, who sometimes wonders what the future will bring.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Without question this was one the best books of the last 5 years. Although not a big fan of short stories for the obvious reason, (they end far to quickly when they are good) I was thrilled with the selection included in this anthology. So often it seems, anthology editors believe that "good" is synonymous with "so obtuse as to be nearly incomprehensible". As if style were indeed far more important than content. Thankfully Adams avoids this and has put together one of the best anthologies in the genre that I have seen. Although I was initially a bit cautious, once I began reading I found it nearly impossible to put down. There were only 2 or 3 stories I might be inclined to call "clunkers", the rest falling into a range between "pretty good" and "Whoa, who was THAT author and what the hell else did they write?" Adams includes a bibliography of sorts at the end of the book that lists a fair number of classic and newer tales of the apocalyptic/post-apocalyptic genre. Definitely a good start but by no means definitive. I strongly urge anyone who is either interested in exploring the genre or is a devotee from way back to give this one a try. I suspect you will love it.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5When reading the back cover of this book, it looks terrible, like classic bad sci-fi. Then you look at the list of authors and realize the luminaries involved. The stories are varied and well-written, and it is one of the better anthologies out there.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5John Joseph Adams has collected some of the greatest post apocalyptic SF from the last twenty years, from some of the greatest speculative fiction talents, all in Wastelands: Stories of The Apocalypse. Many of the stories have garnered awards like Nebula’s or Hugo’s or Locus’. Many more have been nominated or their writers have for other work. You cannot be disappointed by this collection, because the work evidenced here is some of the best story telling science fiction has to offer.
John Joseph Adams has also gone a step further to give the reader a listing of some of the post apocalyptic science fiction novels we should read, if we enjoy the genre. Coupled with his introduction and the pre-story intros, the reader finds a well-crafted argument for why this subgenre of science fiction is one of the best for exploring the human condition.
I highly recommend this anthology for anyone who enjoys reading anything. A lot of these authors I had not read before and I now want to seek out their novels at the bookstore. Each story is unique, and while all share the same basic frame, each writer has been able to pull a completely different conclusion about or assessment of humanity. Some are chilling while others are hopeful, but each will show the reader a facet of himself or herself if they are willing to see it. Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse is the best anthology of any kind I have read to date.
Full Review at Grasping for the Wind
Book preview
Wastelands 2 - More Stories of the Apocalypse - John Joseph Adams
INTRODUCTION
JOHN JOSEPH ADAMS
It’s hard to imagine following up something like the end of the world.
But fans of post-apocalyptic fiction know that end-of-the-world stories aren’t really about the end—they’re about new beginnings and the end of the world as we know it. Our stories, our lives, our world continues on, even if the trappings change and the facade of civilization falls by the wayside. As the title of George R. Stewart’s masterpiece reminds us: the Earth abides.
And as the Earth abides, so does our interest in post-apocalyptic fiction. The genre has continued to flourish in the years since the original Wastelands (hereinafter referred to as Volume One
) was published, and when I began reading for the new anthology I discovered a wealth of material to choose from. Yet it was very difficult to even contemplate following up a book like Volume One, which, to my astonishment, was widely hailed as not only the definitive post-apocalyptic anthology but as one of the finest anthologies of any kind. And, although it was my first anthology, it contained works by the likes of Stephen King, George R. R. Martin, Orson Scott Card, Octavia E. Butler, and other legendary figures of the SF/fantasy field. When you come out of the gates with that kind of success, it’s daunting to say the least to contemplate a follow-up.
But my love for post-apocalyptic fiction has not waned since editing Volume One, and it’s clear the genre is still at the forefront of many authors’ minds as well. Five of the stories included here are from the 20th Century, but the remaining twenty-five were all published from the year 2000 onward, and eighteen of those were originally published in the years since Volume One came out. That seems to indicate that the boom in post-apocalyptic fiction that I detected back when I decided to put Volume One together is still ongoing, and writers and readers now are seemingly as fascinated with the apocalypse as we were back in the genre’s heyday in the 1950s. Or, in other words, it’s certainly not the end of the world for the end-of-the-world genre.
In Volume One’s introduction (which you can find online at johnjosephadams.com/wastelands), I traced the rise and resurgence of post-apocalyptic fiction, citing the dawn of the Atomic Age as the former, and 9/11 as the latter. I also speculated at length about why we’re so fascinated by the end of the world. There, I said, To me, the appeal is obvious: it fulfills our taste for adventure, the thrill of discovery, the desire for a new frontier. It also allows us to start over from scratch, to wipe the slate clean and see what the world may have been like if we had known then what we know now.
But it’s since occurred to me that many of us have a strong attraction to things that scare us; there wouldn’t be a horror genre otherwise. And in many ways, post-apocalyptic fiction is the scariest kind of fiction there is, because the more plausible a horrific story is, the scarier it is. Stories about demons and supernatural monsters can be entertaining, but deep down I don’t find them particularly scary, because I’m pretty certain those things don’t—and never will—exist.
The end of the world, however? That could happen.
Will we ever sate our appetite for stories about the end? It’s hard to imagine that we will. At least not until the end actually comes…
THE TAMARISK HUNTER
PAOLO BACIGALUPI
A big tamarisk can suck 73,000 gallons of river water a year. For $2.88 a day, plus water bounty, Lolo rips tamarisk all winter long.
Ten years ago, it was a good living. Back then, tamarisk shouldered up against every riverbank in the Colorado River Basin, along with cottonwoods, Russian olives, and elms. Ten years ago, towns like Grand Junction and Moab thought they could still squeeze life from a river.
Lolo stands on the edge of a canyon, Maggie the camel his only companion. He stares down into the deeps. It’s an hour’s scramble to the bottom. He ties Maggie to a juniper and starts down, boot-skiing a gully. A few blades of green grass sprout neon around him, piercing juniper-tagged snow clods. In the late winter, there is just a beginning surge of water down in the deeps; the ice is off the river edges. Up high, the mountains still wear their ragged snow mantles. Lolo smears through mud and hits a channel of scree, sliding and scattering rocks. His jugs of tamarisk poison gurgle and slosh on his back. His shovel and rockbar snag on occasional junipers as he skids by. It will be a long hike out. But then, that’s what makes this patch so perfect. It’s a long way down, and the riverbanks are largely hidden.
It’s a living; where other people have dried out and blown away, he has remained: a tamarisk hunter, a water tick, a stubborn bit of weed. Everyone else has been blown off the land as surely as dandelion seeds, set free to fly south or east, or most of all north where watersheds sometimes still run deep and where even if there are no more lush ferns or deep cold fish runs, at least there is still water for people.
Eventually, Lolo reaches the canyon bottom. Down in the cold shadows, his breath steams.
He pulls out a digital camera and starts shooting his proof. The Bureau of Reclamation has gotten uptight about proof. They want different angles on the offending tamarisk, they want each one photographed before and after, the whole process documented, GPS’d, and uploaded directly by the camera. They want it done on-site. And then they still sometimes come out to spot check before they calibrate his headgate for water bounty.
But all their due diligence can’t protect them from the likes of Lolo. Lolo has found the secret to eternal life as a tamarisk hunter. Unknown to the Interior Department and its BuRec subsidiary, he has been seeding new patches of tamarisk, encouraging vigorous brushy groves in previously cleared areas. He has hauled and planted healthy root balls up and down the river system in strategically hidden and inaccessible corridors, all in a bid for security against the swarms of other tamarisk hunters that scour these same tributaries. Lolo is crafty. Stands like this one, a quarter-mile long and thick with salt-laden tamarisk, are his insurance policy.
Documentation finished, he unstraps a folding saw, along with his rockbar and shovel, and sets his poison jugs on the dead salt bank. He starts cutting, slicing into the roots of the tamarisk, pausing every thirty seconds to spread Garlon 4 on the cuts, poisoning the tamarisk wounds faster than they can heal. But some of the best tamarisk, the most vigorous, he uproots and sets aside, for later use.
$2.88 a day, plus water bounty.
* * *
It takes Maggie’s rolling bleating camel stride a week to make it back to Lolo’s homestead. They follow the river, occasionally climbing above it onto cold mesas or wandering off into the open desert in a bid to avoid the skeleton sprawl of emptied towns. Guardie choppers buzz up and down the river like swarms of angry yellowjackets, hunting for porto-pumpers and wildcat diversions. They rush overhead in a wash of beaten air and gleaming National Guard logos. Lolo remembers a time when the guardies traded potshots with people down on the riverbanks, tracer-fire and machine-gun chatter echoing in the canyons. He remembers the glorious hiss and arc of a Stinger missile as it flashed across red-rock desert and blue sky and burned a chopper where it hovered.
But that’s long in the past. Now, guardie patrols skim up the river unmolested.
Lolo tops another mesa and stares down at the familiar landscape of an eviscerated town, its curving streets and subdivision cul-de-sacs all sitting silent in the sun. At the very edge of the empty town, one-acre ranchettes and snazzy five-thousand-square-foot houses with dead-stick trees and dust-hill landscaping fringe a brown tumbleweed golf course. The sandtraps don’t even show anymore.
When California put its first calls on the river, no one really worried. A couple towns went begging for water. Some idiot newcomers with bad water rights stopped grazing their horses, and that was it. A few years later, people started showering real fast. And a few after that, they showered once a week. And then people started using the buckets. By then, everyone had stopped joking about how hot
it was. It didn’t really matter how hot
it was. The problem wasn’t lack of water or an excess of heat, not really. The problem was that 4.4 million acre-feet of water were supposed to go down the river to California. There was water; they just couldn’t touch it.
They were supposed to stand there like dumb monkeys and watch it flow on by.
Lolo?
The voice catches him by surprise. Maggie startles and groans and lunges for the mesa edge before Lolo can rein her around. The camel’s great padded feet scuffle dust and Lolo flails for his shotgun where it nestles in a scabbard at the camel’s side. He forces Maggie to turn, shotgun half-drawn, holding barely to his seat and swearing.
A familiar face, tucked amongst juniper tangle.
Goddamnit!
Lolo lets the shotgun drop back into its scabbard. Jesus Christ, Travis. You scared the hell out of me.
Travis grins. He emerges from amongst the junipers’ silver bark rags, one hand on his gray fedora, the other on the reins as he guides his mule out of the trees. Surprised?
I could’ve shot you!
Don’t be so jittery. There’s no one out here ’cept us water ticks.
That’s what I thought the last time I went shopping down there. I had a whole set of new dishes for Annie and I broke them all when I ran into an ultralight parked right in the middle of the main drag.
Meth flyers?
Beats the hell out of me. I didn’t stick around to ask.
Shit. I’ll bet they were as surprised as you were.
They almost killed me.
I guess they didn’t.
Lolo shakes his head and swears again, this time without anger. Despite the ambush, he’s happy to run into Travis. It’s lonely country, and Lolo’s been out long enough to notice the silence of talking to Maggie. They trade ritual sips of water from their canteens and make camp together. They swap stories about BuRec and avoid discussing where they’ve been ripping tamarisk and enjoy the view of the empty town far below, with its serpentine streets and quiet houses and shining untouched river.
It isn’t until the sun is setting and they’ve finished roasting a magpie that Lolo finally asks the question that’s been on his mind ever since Travis’s sun-baked face came out of the tangle. It goes against etiquette, but he can’t help himself. He picks magpie out of his teeth and says, I thought you were working downriver.
Travis glances sidelong at Lolo and in that one suspicious, uncertain look, Lolo sees that Travis has hit a lean patch. He’s not smart like Lolo. He hasn’t been reseeding. He’s got no insurance. He hasn’t been thinking ahead about all the competition, and what the tamarisk endgame looks like, and now he’s feeling the pinch. Lolo feels a twinge of pity. He likes Travis. A part of him wants to tell Travis the secret, but he stifles the urge. The stakes are too high. Water crimes are serious now, so serious Lolo hasn’t even told his wife, Annie, for fear of what she’ll say. Like all of the most shameful crimes, water theft is a private business, and at the scale Lolo works, forced labor on the Straw is the best punishment he can hope for.
Travis gets his hackles down over Lolo’s invasion of his privacy and says, I had a couple cows I was running up here, but I lost ’em. I think something got ’em.
Long way to graze cows.
Yeah, well, down my way even the sagebrush is dead. Big Daddy Drought’s doing a real number on my patch.
He pinches his lip, thoughtful. Wish I could find those cows.
They probably went down to the river.
Travis sighs. Then the guardies probably got ’em.
Probably shot ’em from a chopper and roasted ’em.
Californians.
They both spit at the word. The sun continues to sink. Shadows fall across the town’s silent structures. The rooftops gleam red, a ruby cluster decorating the blue river necklace.
You think there’s any stands worth pulling down there?
Travis asks.
You can go down and look. But I think I got it all last year. And someone had already been through before me, so I doubt much is coming up.
Shit. Well, maybe I’ll go shopping. Might as well get something out of this trip.
There sure isn’t anyone to stop you.
As if to emphasize the fact, the thud-thwap of a guardie chopper breaks the evening silence. The black-fly dot of its movement barely shows against the darkening sky. Soon it’s out of sight and cricket chirps swallow the last evidence of its passing.
Travis laughs. Remember when the guardies said they’d keep out looters? I saw them on TV with all their choppers and Humvees and them all saying they were going to protect everything until the situation improved.
He laughs again. You remember that? All of them driving up and down the streets?
I remember.
Sometimes I wonder if we shouldn’t have fought them more.
Annie was in Lake Havasu City when they fought there. You saw what happened.
Lolo shivers. Anyway, there’s not much to fight for once they blow up your water treatment plant. If nothing’s coming out of your faucet, you might as well move on.
Yeah, well, sometimes I think you still got to fight. Even if it’s just for pride.
Travis gestures at the town below, a shadow movement. I remember when all that land down there was selling like hotcakes and they were building shit as fast as they could ship in the lumber. Shopping malls and parking lots and subdivisions, anywhere they could scrape a flat spot.
We weren’t calling it Big Daddy Drought, back then.
Forty-five thousand people. And none of us had a clue. And I was a real estate agent.
Travis laughs, a self-mocking sound that ends quickly. It sounds too much like self-pity for Lolo’s taste. They’re quiet again, looking down at the town wreckage.
I think I might be heading north,
Travis says finally.
Lolo glances over, surprised. Again he has the urge to let Travis in on his secret, but he stifles it. And do what?
Pick fruit, maybe. Maybe something else. Anyway, there’s water up there.
Lolo points down at the river. There’s water.
Not for us.
Travis pauses. I got to level with you, Lolo. I went down to the Straw.
For a second, Lolo is confused by the non sequitur. The statement is too outrageous. And yet Travis’s face is serious. The Straw? No kidding? All the way there?
All the way there.
He shrugs defensively. I wasn’t finding any tamarisk, anyway. And it didn’t actually take that long. It’s a lot closer than it used to be. A week out to the train tracks, and then I hopped a coal train, and rode it right to the interstate, and then I hitched.
What’s it like out there?
Empty. A trucker told me that California and the Interior Department drew up all these plans to decide which cities they’d turn off when.
He looks at Lolo significantly. That was after Lake Havasu. They figured out they had to do it slow. They worked out some kind of formula: how many cities, how many people they could evaporate at a time without making too much unrest. Got advice from the Chinese, from when they were shutting down their old communist industries. Anyway, it looks like they’re pretty much done with it. There’s nothing moving out there except highway trucks and coal trains and a couple truck stops.
And you saw the Straw?
Oh sure, I saw it. Out toward the border. Big old mother. So big you couldn’t climb on top of it, flopped out on the desert like a damn silver snake. All the way to California.
He spits reflexively. They’re spraying with concrete to keep water from seeping into the ground and they’ve got some kind of carbon-fiber stuff over the top to stop the evaporation. And the river just disappears inside. Nothing but an empty canyon below it. Bone-dry. And choppers and Humvees everywhere, like a damn hornets’ nest. They wouldn’t let me get any closer than a half mile on account of the eco-crazies trying to blow it up. They weren’t nice about it, either.
What did you expect?
I dunno. It sure depressed me, though: They work us out here and toss us a little water bounty and then all that water next year goes right down into that big old pipe. Some Californian’s probably filling his swimming pool with last year’s water bounty right now.
Cricket-song pulses in the darkness. Off in the distance, a pack of coyotes starts yipping. The two of them are quiet for a while. Finally, Lolo chucks his friend on the shoulder. Hell, Travis, it’s probably for the best. A desert’s a stupid place to put a river, anyway.
* * *
Lolo’s homestead runs across a couple acres of semi-alkaline soil, conveniently close to the river’s edge. Annie is out in the field when he crests the low hills that overlook his patch. She waves, but keeps digging, planting for whatever water he can collect in bounty.
Lolo pauses, watching Annie work. Hot wind kicks up, carrying with it the scents of sage and clay. A dust devil swirls around Annie, whipping her bandana off her head. Lolo smiles as she snags it; she sees him still watching her and waves at him to quit loafing.
He grins to himself and starts Maggie down the hill, but he doesn’t stop watching Annie work. He’s grateful for her. Grateful that every time he comes back from tamarisk hunting she is still here. She’s steady. Steadier than the people like Travis who give up when times get dry. Steadier than anyone Lolo knows, really. And if she has nightmares sometimes, and can’t stand being in towns or crowds and wakes up in the middle of the night calling out for family she’ll never see again, well, then it’s all the more reason to seed more tamarisk and make sure they never get pushed off their patch like she was pushed.
Lolo gets Maggie to kneel down so he can dismount, then leads her over to a water trough, half-full of slime and water skippers. He gets a bucket and heads for the river while Maggie groans and complains behind him. The patch used to have a well and running water, but like everyone else, they lost their pumping rights and BuRec stuffed the well with Quickcrete when the water table dropped below the Minimum Allowable Reserve. Now he and Annie steal buckets from the river, or, when the Interior Department isn’t watching, they jump up and down on a footpump and dump water into a hidden underground cistern he built when the Resource Conservation and Allowable Use Guidelines went into effect.
Annie calls the guidelines RaCAUG
and it sounds like she’s hawking spit when she says it, but even with their filled-in well, they’re lucky. They aren’t like Spanish Oaks or Antelope Valley or River Reaches: expensive places that had rotten water rights and turned to dust, money or no, when Vegas and L.A. put in their calls. And they didn’t have to bail out of Phoenix Metro when the Central Arizona Project got turned off and then had its aqueducts blown to smithereens when Arizona wouldn’t stop pumping out of Lake Havasu.
Pouring water into Maggie’s water trough, and looking around at his dusty patch with Annie out in the fields, Lolo reminds himself how lucky he is. He hasn’t blown away. He and Annie are dug in. Calies may call them water ticks, but fuck them. If it weren’t for people like him and Annie, they’d dry up and blow away the same as everyone else. And if Lolo moves a little bit of tamarisk around, well, the Calies deserve it, considering what they’ve done to everyone else.
Finished with Maggie, Lolo goes into the house and gets a drink of his own out of the filter urn. The water is cool in the shadows of the adobe house. Juniper beams hang low overhead. He sits down and connects his BuRec camera to the solar panel they’ve got scabbed onto the roof. Its charge light blinks amber. Lolo goes and gets some more water. He’s used to being thirsty, but for some reason he can’t get enough today. Big Daddy Drought’s got his hands around Lolo’s neck today.
Annie comes in, wiping her forehead with a tanned arm. Don’t drink too much water,
she says. I haven’t been able to pump. Bunch of guardies around.
What the hell are they doing around? We haven’t even opened our headgates yet.
They said they were looking for you.
Lolo almost drops his cup.
They know.
They know about his tamarisk reseeding. They know he’s been splitting and planting root-clusters. That he’s been dragging big healthy chunks of tamarisk up and down the river. A week ago he uploaded his claim on the canyon tamarisk—his biggest stand yet—almost worth an acre-foot in itself in water bounty. And now the guardies are knocking on his door.
Lolo forces his hand not to shake as he puts his cup down. They say what they want?
He’s surprised his voice doesn’t crack.
Just that they wanted to talk to you.
She pauses. They had one of those Humvees. With the guns.
Lolo closes his eyes. Forces himself to take a deep breath. They’ve always got guns. It’s probably nothing.
It reminded me of Lake Havasu. When they cleared us out. When they shut down the water treatment plant and everyone tried to burn down the BLM office.
It’s probably nothing.
Suddenly he’s glad he never told her about his tamarisk hijinks. They can’t punish her the same. How many acre-feet is he liable for? It must be hundreds. They’ll want him, all right. Put him on a Straw work crew and make him work for life, repay his water debt forever. He’s replanted hundreds, maybe thousands of tamarisk, shuffling them around like a cardsharp on a poker table, moving them from one bank to another, killing them again and again and again, and always happily sending in his evidence.
It’s probably nothing,
he says again.
That’s what people said in Havasu.
Lolo waves out at their newly tilled patch. The sun shines down hot and hard on the small plot. We’re not worth that kind of effort.
He forces a grin. It probably has to do with those enviro crazies who tried to blow up the Straw. Some of them supposedly ran this way. It’s probably that.
Annie shakes her head, unconvinced. I don’t know. They could have asked me the same as you.
Yeah, but I cover a lot of ground. See a lot of things. I’ll bet that’s why they want to talk to me. They’re just looking for eco-freaks.
Yeah, maybe you’re right. It’s probably that.
She nods slowly, trying to make herself believe. Those enviros, they don’t make any sense at all. Not enough water for people, and they want to give the river to a bunch of fish and birds.
Lolo nods emphatically and grins wider. Yeah. Stupid.
But suddenly he views the eco-crazies with something approaching brotherly affection. The Californians are after him, too.
* * *
Lolo doesn’t sleep all night. His instincts tell him to run, but he doesn’t have the heart to tell Annie, or to leave her. He goes out in the morning hunting tamarisk and fails at that as well. He doesn’t cut a single stand all day. He considers shooting himself with his shotgun, but chickens out when he gets the barrels in his mouth. Better alive and on the run than dead. Finally, as he stares into the twin barrels, he knows that he has to tell Annie, tell her he’s been a water thief for years and that he’s got to run north. Maybe she’ll come with him. Maybe she’ll see reason. They’ll run together. At least they have that. For sure, he’s not going to let those bastards take him off to a labor camp for the rest of his life.
But the guardies are already waiting when Lolo gets back. They’re squatting in the shade of their Humvee, talking. When Lolo comes over the crest of the hill, one of them taps the other and points. They both stand. Annie is out in the field again, turning over dirt, unaware of what’s about to happen. Lolo reins in and studies the guardies. They lean against their Humvee and watch him back.
Suddenly Lolo sees his future. It plays out in his mind the way it does in a movie, as clear as the blue sky above. He puts his hand on his shotgun. Where it sits on Maggie’s far side, the guardies can’t see it. He keeps Maggie angled away from them and lets the camel start down the hill.
The guardies saunter toward him. They’ve got their Humvee with a .50 caliber on the back and they’ve both got M-16s slung over their shoulders. They’re in full bulletproof gear and they look flushed and hot. Lolo rides down slowly. He’ll have to hit them both in the face. Sweat trickles between his shoulder blades. His hand is slick on the shotgun’s stock.
The guardies are playing it cool. They’ve still got their rifles slung, and they let Lolo keep approaching. One of them has a wide smile. He’s maybe forty years old, and tanned. He’s been out for a while, picking up a tan like that. The other raises a hand and says, Hey there, Lolo.
Lolo’s so surprised he takes his hand off his shotgun. Hale?
He recognizes the guardie. He grew up with him. They played football together a million years ago, when football fields still had green grass and sprinklers sprayed their water straight into the air. Hale. Hale Perkins. Lolo scowls. He can’t shoot Hale.
Hale says, You’re still out here, huh?
What the hell are you doing in that uniform? You with the Calies now?
Hale grimaces and points to his uniform patches: Utah National Guard.
Lolo scowls. Utah National Guard. Colorado National Guard. Arizona National Guard. They’re all the same. There’s hardly a single member of the National Guard
that isn’t an out-of-state mercenary. Most of the local guardies quit a long time ago, sick to death of goose-stepping family and friends off their properties and sick to death of trading potshots with people who just wanted to stay in their homes. So even if there’s still a Colorado National Guard, or an Arizona or a Utah, inside those uniforms with all their expensive nightsight gear and their brand-new choppers flying the river bends, it’s pure California.
And then there are a few like Hale.
Lolo remembers Hale as being an OK guy. Remembers stealing a keg of beer from behind the Elks Club one night with him. Lolo eyes him. How you liking that Supplementary Assistance Program?
He glances at the other guardie. That working real well for you? The Calies a big help?
Hale’s eyes plead for understanding. Come on, Lolo. I’m not like you. I got a family to look after. If I do another year of duty, they let Shannon and the kids base out of California.
They give you a swimming pool in your back yard, too?
You know it’s not like that. Water’s scarce there, too.
Lolo wants to taunt him, but his heart isn’t in it. A part of him wonders if Hale is just smart. At first, when California started winning its water lawsuits and shutting off cities, the displaced people just followed the water—right to California. It took a little while before the bureaucrats realized what was going on, but finally someone with a sharp pencil did the math and realized that taking in people along with their water didn’t solve a water shortage. So the immigration fences went up.
But people like Hale can still get in.
So what do you two want?
Inside, Lolo’s wondering why they haven’t already pulled him off Maggie and hauled him away, but he’s willing to play this out.
The other guardie grins. Maybe we’re just out here seeing how the water ticks live.
Lolo eyes him. This one, he could shoot. He lets his hand fall to his shotgun again. BuRec sets my headgate. No reason for you to be out here.
The Calie says, There were some marks on it. Big ones.
Lolo smiles tightly. He knows which marks the Calie is talking about. He made them with five different wrenches when he tried to dismember the entire headgate apparatus in a fit of obsession. Finally he gave up trying to open the bolts and just beat on the thing, banging the steel of the gate, smashing at it, while on the other side he had plants withering. After that, he gave up and just carried buckets of water to his plants and left it at that. But the dents and nicks are still there, reminding him of a period of madness. It still works, don’t it?
Hale holds up a hand to his partner, quieting him. Yeah, it still works. That’s not why we’re here.
So what do you two want? You didn’t drive all the way out here with your machine gun just to talk about dents in my headgate.
Hale sighs, put upon, trying to be reasonable. You mind getting down off that damn camel so we can talk?
Lolo studies the two guardies, figuring his chances on the ground. Shit.
He spits. Yeah, OK. You got me.
He urges Maggie to kneel and climbs off her hump. Annie didn’t know anything about this. Don’t get her involved. It was all me.
Hale’s brow wrinkles, puzzled. What are you talking about?
You’re not arresting me?
The Calie with Hale laughs. Why? Cause you take a couple buckets of water from the river? Cause you probably got an illegal cistern around here somewhere?
He laughs again. You ticks are all the same. You think we don’t know about all that crap?
Hale scowls at the Calie, then turns back to Lolo. No, we’re not here to arrest you. You know about the Straw?
Yeah.
Lolo says it slowly, but inside, he’s grinning. A great weight is suddenly off him. They don’t know. They don’t know shit. It was a good plan when he started it, and it’s a good plan still. Lolo schools his face to keep the glee off, and tries to listen to what Hale’s saying, but he can’t, he’s jumping up and down and gibbering like a monkey. They don’t know—
Wait.
Lolo holds up his hand. What did you just say?
Hale repeats himself. California’s ending the water bounty. They’ve got enough Straw sections built up now that they don’t need the program. They’ve got half the river enclosed. They got an agreement from the Department of Interior to focus their budget on seep and evaporation control. That’s where all the big benefits are. They’re shutting down the water bounty payout program.
He pauses. I’m sorry, Lolo.
Lolo frowns. But a tamarisk is still a tamarisk. Why should one of those damn plants get the water? If I knock out a tamarisk, even if Cali doesn’t want the water, I could still take it. Lots of people could use the water.
Hale looks pityingly at Lolo. We don’t make the regulations, we just enforce them. I’m supposed to tell you that your headgate won’t get opened next year. If you keep hunting tamarisk, it won’t do any good.
He looks around the patch, then shrugs. Anyway, in another couple years they were going to pipe this whole stretch. There won’t be any tamarisk at all after that.
What am I supposed to do, then?
California and BuRec is offering early buyout money.
Hale pulls a booklet out of his bulletproof vest and flips it open. Sort of to soften the blow.
The pages of the booklet flap in the hot breeze. Hale pins the pages with a thumb and pulls a pen out of another vest pocket. He marks something on the booklet, then tears off a perforated check. It’s not a bad deal.
Lolo takes the check. Stares at it. Five hundred dollars?
Hale shrugs sadly. It’s what they’re offering. That’s just the paper codes. You confirm it online. Use your BuRec camera phone, and they’ll deposit it in whatever bank you want. Or they can hold it in trust until you get into a town and want to withdraw it. Any place with a BLM office, you can do that. But you need to confirm before April 15. Then BuRec’ll send out a guy to shut down your headgate before this season gets going.
Five hundred dollars?
It’s enough to get you north. That’s more than they’re offering next year.
But this is my patch.
Not as long as we’ve got Big Daddy Drought. I’m sorry, Lolo.
The drought could break any time. Why can’t they give us a couple more years? It could break any time.
But even as he says it, Lolo doesn’t believe. Ten years ago, he might have. But not now. Big Daddy Drought’s here to stay. He clutches the check and its keycodes to his chest.
A hundred yards away, the river flows on to California.
DEEP BLOOD KETTLE
HUGH HOWEY
They say the sky will fill with dust in a bad way if we don’t do something soon. My teacher Mrs. Sandy says that if the meteor hits, it’ll put up enough dirt to block the sun, and everything will turn cold for a long, long while. When I came home and told Pa about this, he got angry. He called Mrs. Sandy a bad word, said she was teaching us nonsense. I told him the dinosaurs died because of dust in the sky. Pa said there weren’t no such thing as dinosaurs.
You boys watch,
he told me and my brother. That rock’ll burn up. It’ll be no more than a flash of light. I’ve seen a million shooting stars if I’ve seen a dozen.
Pa stopped rubbing his rifle and traced a big arc in the air with his oil-stained rag. She’ll hit the sky and light up like fireworks, and the worst she’ll do is leave a crater like that one down in Arizona. Then we’ll show them suckers how we watch over our land.
Only Pa don’t use the word suckers.
Pa uses worse words for the invaders than he ever did for Mrs. Sandy. He never calls them aliens. Sometimes he says it’s the Russians or the Chinese or the Koreans. He believes in aliens about as much as dinosaurs.
Pa spat in the dirt and asked if I was taking a break or something. I told him nossir
and went back to oiling my gun. He and my brother did the same.
* * *
Pa says our land is fertile because of the killin’ we soak it in. That’s why things grow as tall as they do. The little critters are killed dead and give their life to the soil.
I seen it every year when we plow it under for the new crops. When I was a boy, before father let me drive the John Deere, I’d play in the loose soil his plowing left behind. Acres and acres for a sandbox. The dust he kicked up would blot the sky and dry my mouth, but I’d kick through the furrows and dig for arrowheads until my fingernails were chipped or packed full of dirt.
Where he hadn’t yet plowed, you could see the dead stalks from the last harvest. The soil there was packed tight from the rains and the dry spells. Pa used to laugh at the newfangled ways of planting that kept the ground like that by driving the seeds straight through. It weren’t the way the Samuels tended their land, he told us. We Samuels dragged great steel plows across the hard pack and the old stalks and we killed everything in the ground. That was what made the land ready again.
When I was younger, I found half a worm floppin’ on top of the ground after a plow. It moved like the tail on a happy dog, but it was already dead. Took a while for it to realize, was all. I pinched it between my fingers and watched it wind down like the grandfather clock in the great room. When it was still, the worm went into a furrow, and I kicked some dirt over it. That was the whole point. The little things would feed the corn, and the corn would feed us, and we would all get taller because of it. Pa, meanwhile, drove that tractor in great circles that took him nearly out of sight; the dust he kicked up could blot out the whole Montana sky, and my boots would fill up with gravel as I kicked through the loose furrows he left behind.
* * *
Pa only believes in things he can see. He didn’t believe in the meteor until it became brighter than any star in the sky. Before long, you could see it in the daytime if you knew where to look and squinted just right. The people on the TV talked to scientists who said it was coming straight for us. They had a date and time and everything. One of them said you could know where it would land, but that nobody wanted a panic. It just meant people panicked everywhere. And then it leaked that the rock would hit somewhere between Russia and China, and Pa reckoned those people were panicking a little worse.
He called it a rock, not a meteor. Like a bunch of people, Pa don’t think it’ll amount to much. Folks been predicting doom since his grandpa was a boy, and the world outside still looked pretty much the same.
This was before we got First Contact.
That’s what they called it even though the rock hadn’t set down yet. It was nothing but a phone call from what I could tell. On the TV they said it was coming from the other side of the rock. That’s when even the scientists and all the smart people started acting a little crazy.
First Contact happened back when Mrs. Sandy was still our teacher. We listened to the news at school, I talked to her, and I didn’t tell Pa any of what I learned. It made him angry hearing about the demands, but Mrs. Sandy said it was the best thing that ever happened to our planet, them deciding to come here. She told me a lot before she left and the substitute took her place. She was going to be one of them that welcomed the invaders, even sold her house and bought a pickup with a camper back. I eventually reckoned Pa was right to call her some of those bad things.
But I did sort out a bunch between the TV and what Mrs. Sandy said. The rock weren’t no accident like the scientists used to suppose. It was aimed. Like the stones I chucked after a plowing, trying to hit one rock with another. The invaders, they was right behind the big rock.
Mrs. Sandy liked to say that our governments would make the right choice. And all of a sudden, the same channels on TV that I watched for news showed new people. They wore headphones and spoke funny and argued over what to do. My brother wouldn’t stop asking about the little flags in front of each of them, and I had to tell him to shut up so I could hear.
The invaders were giving us a choice, it sounded like. All they wanted was half our land and for us to get rid of all of our weapons, and they would leave most of us alone. They gave a date. It was the same one the scientists had already figured. The rock could be moved, they said. It didn’t have to hit. It could go into orbit, and then we could have it for our own.
On a different channel, men with suits and ties argued real loud over how much the rock was worth. They used words I’d never heard of before, something more than trillion.
I knew what gold and some of the other valuable things were, but some were called rare and sounded like they were from Earth. I couldn’t sort out how something that could kill us one day could be worth so much the next, but the invaders said the rock only needed a nudge.
* * *
When I turned thirteen, Pa said I was finally old enough to drive. He taught me in the old pickup with the missing tailgate and the tires that were always starving for air. It was a shifter, which seemed a hard way to start driving, but Pa believed in learning the worst to begin with. I had to yank up on the steering wheel to push the old clutch all the way in. Damn thing made it so my arms would be as sore at night as my legs. Pa cursed every time the gears growled, and it was hot in the truck even with the windows down. But I got to where he would send me to fetch the mail. And once I’d mastered the old pickup, he taught me on the John Deere, and I learned to plow. Pa was right that it made driving the tractor easier. But it was still scary as hell.
The first time you drive something so big, you wonder if one man ought to be able. There was a red lever that went from rabbit to turtle, and Pa would stand in the cabin with me and yell for me to nudge it up. But we were already bouncing around something fierce. The noise was terrible. And looking back, I couldn’t see the house through the haze I was stirring. It weren’t even like we were moving so much as the great big tires of the tractor were spinning the earth beneath their knobby treads. Pa would bend over the seat and knock the red lever up, and the bucking would grow worse. The steering wheel jittered side to side, and I had to clutch it just to stay in my seat.
But like the truck, my fear of the tractor didn’t keep. Before long, Pa hitched the great plow to the back, twenty-four feet wide, and I learned how to kill the soil to make it ready for planting. The seat would bounce me along like I was in a saddle, and the radio would blare in the little cabin that smelled like my dad when he was sweaty. I did circles like I was mowing grass, but twenty-four feet at a time. The mesa behind our house would disappear behind the dust, and it got so I couldn’t see the cliffs along the back of the homestead. But I could see the soil in front packed hard and tight, and I could see out the side where I’d already been. Plowing was a lot like mowing—I just had to overlap where I’d been before.
Not too much overlap,
Pa would tell me. The price of gas had gone way up since First Contact, and too much overlap meant an extra run for no good reason. And so I bounced along and put death in the soil. I cut the worms in half and made things ready for planting. Now and then, a deer would startle across the loose furrows, legs having a hard time of it, and white rabbits would dash from the thrush. The rabbits were the dumbest little things. They would dart back and forth in front of the tractor—they could see me coming, but they couldn’t make up their minds. I would yell and yell at them, but they would just jitter back and forth until the tractor went over them and then the plow. Turning in my seat, I always expected a tuft of white to spit out somewhere, but the soil that kicked up would just turn a little red.
That’s where the corn will grow the tallest,
Pa would say when I told him how dumb the rabbits were. The blood in the soil was a good thing. That’s when you knew it was ready.
* * *
The cliffs behind our house were a source of constant play, and they had a funny name. Too Close for Comfort, they were called. I reckoned kids made up that name, but it was a real thing. Scientists called it that. Men who were supposedly smart had come up with it.
When I was a boy too young to drive—before I turned thirteen—they came from the university and dug in the dirt at the base of the cliffs that rise up behind our land. They found so many bones beneath the dirt that they couldn’t take them all. Steve Harkin and I plotted to sneak in one night and nab a skull or two, but the men in the shiny city trucks with no 4X4 put a stop to that by giving us a skull each. It weren’t as fun without the danger and flashlights, but we got our skulls.
I remember cradling that great hunk of bone as heavy as stone and asking one of the university men there why they were digging there.
This here was a buffalo jump,
the man told me. He reminded me of Mrs. Sandy, and he had this clipboard with all kinds of little squares full of numbers and was the smartest man I ever spoke to ’cept for my Pa.
The buffalo used to come over this cliff and smash into the rocks down here,
he told me and Steve Harkin. That’s where these bones came from.
Steve thought that was pretty cool. We gazed up at the cliffs that I had known all my life, the ones that delayed the sunrise in the morning, and I saw them different for the first time. I asked this man from the university why buffalo were so dumb.
Oh, buffalo aren’t dumb,
he claimed. I was about to argue with him, but then he explained. Indians used to chase the buffalo to the edge of the cliff in great herds,
he said. They tumbled off hundreds at a time and smashed their legs so they couldn’t walk. While they squealed and snorted and tried to pick themselves up on busted bones, the Indians would run in with spears and jab ’em in the neck.
Steve whistled. I asked the man if that was real.
Very real,
he said. The people who used to live here long before us called it pishkun.
Pushkin,
Steve Harkin said. What does that mean?
It means ‘deep blood kettle,’
the man told us. He pointed to where the men and women were digging in these funny squares with ropes and stakes marking everything off. You can still see the blood in the soil,
he said.
I didn’t know if that man from the university was playing with us or not, but I told him we needed to go. That skull he’d given me was getting heavier and heavier the longer he talked.
* * *
The people on TV with the little flags and the headphones reminded me of white rabbits in the plow season. You could watch ’em go back and forth on the screen. Everyone wanted the gold and the trillions and trillions and trillions and all the rare Earth stuff. But nobody wanted to give up their land. And the invaders insisted on half. They wanted half or they would take it all.
People on the TV argued about why the aliens would do something like this, why they would let the rock hit us and kick up the dirt and make things cold, but I knew. I reckon I knew better than most. Just the year before, I’d watched a movie about invaders coming down. They’d made a different kind of contact. There were fights with lasers and explosions and our side found a way at the end to lick them for good.
It was a good movie, but those invaders were dumb. I tried to picture us Samuels taming our plot of land something like that. Pa and Riley and me would take to the soil with guns and shoot the worms one by one. And the worms would fight back with the rabbits, the deer, the turtles, and the foxes. And I could imagine them swarming us and licking us good. They were dumb, but there was an awful lot of them.
Which was why we used the plow. It was why we throw the dirt up into the air. We make all things die in the soil so when we put in our own seed, that’s all the life there is. And where the ground is reddest, that deep blood kettle, the corn reaches up so high you think it might leave us behind. And that’s what the rock will do, plow us under. It weren’t going to be like that movie at all.
Mrs. Sandy used to say before she left town that the dust would kick up and blot out the sky if the rock fell, but she didn’t think we would let that happen. Mrs. Sandy always thought the best of people. She even liked my Pa, no matter what he called her. Me, I wished she would come back from wherever she went. I’d like to have her sit in the John Deere with me and feel it buck and buck and chase down those rabbits too dumb to move. I’d take Mrs. Sandy by the hand and lead her to the cliffs on the edge of our land and show her the piles of bones and see what the Indians had done.
But Mrs. Sandy was gone, and nobody went to school no more. And outside, the spot of light in the sky had grown so bright that it was like a star in the daytime. The people on the TV moved like rabbits. They were chased like buffalo. And you didn’t need to know where to look no more to see that something bad was coming.
ANIMAL HUSBANDRY
SEANAN MCGUIRE
The city of Clayton was burning. I saw the smoke from over fifteen miles away, but I kept riding towards it, less from hope that the fire was a sign of civilization than from sheer, cussed stubbornness. My instructions said I needed to go this way. Since all the GPS systems failed around the time the networks and satellite uplinks died, I really didn’t think that deviating was a good idea. Not if I was actively interested in living, anyway.
Fortunately for me, the wind was blowing out to sea, carrying the bulk of the doubtless carcinogenic smoke with it. I left the trailer about a mile down the road from the lookout point, choosing the minor risk that one of the other poor souls left in this godforsaken world would stumble over it—you can’t exactly LoJack a draft horse—over the greater risks of smoke inhalation and panicked animals rocketing out of my control. My mare, the unimaginatively named Midnight, would put up with just about anything I asked from her. She’d be able to stand the heat as long as I could.
Even with the wind in our favor, the air was so thick with ash that I could practically chew it by the time we got to the top of the lookout point. I shielded my eyes to block the flames, squinting through the smoke as I strained to see the city beyond. There wasn’t much left to see. The fire had almost burned itself out, but it was still vigorous enough to make that particular route impassable.
There were two choices. We could try to find another route. Or we could backtrack twenty miles to the superstore I’d seen in San Ramon, resupply, and let the fire finish burning itself to death.
We need a break, don’t we, Midnight?
I asked, running a hand down the anxious mare’s throat. She snorted, front legs dancing a half-panicked tattoo against the gravel. She was ready to bolt, holding herself in place solely because she assumed I wanted her to stay.
There was no need for that. We’d seen everything we’d come to see, and it was just more devastation. Tugging gently on the reins, I turned Midnight towards the caravan, and the road.
* * *
Before we rode out of the region completely, I stopped at the sign marking the city limits, pulled out my staple gun and another of my precious flyers, and set to work. Even if we didn’t come back this way, even if the store managed to yield a better route, I would have done my self-imposed duty by the people who might still be living here. Wherever they were. When we finally turned towards San Ramon, white copy-paper ghosts glared from the city sign behind us, eye-poppingly clean in a landscape gone to ash.
It would never be enough, but it would have to do.
IMPORTANT—IMPORTANT—IMPORTANT—PLEASE READ YOUR SURVIVAL COULD DEPEND ON IT
"If you’re alive and reading this, there are a few things you should be aware of. Firstly, those diseases everyone died of? The ones that barely had time to make the papers before it was over? They weren’t natural, and that means there’s no way to estimate their out-of-body survival rates. Be careful. Keep contact with the dead to an absolute minimum. If you must handle human remains, wear gloves and be prepared to dispose of your outer garments immediately afterwards. Avoid closed-up spaces where people died, especially those which have remained moist. Diseases survive better in dark, warm, moist places.
"Stick with bottled water whenever possible. Boil everything when you can’t. All that plastic they said we needed to keep out of the landfills? Forget it. Bottled water could save you. (Not just from the manmade toxins. Cholera, dysentery, lots of other nasty things could be lurking in the water by now. Drink Crystal Springs or