Recent from talks
Knowledge base stats:
Talk channels stats:
Members stats:
Earth Abides
Earth Abides is a 1949 American post-apocalyptic science fiction novel by George R. Stewart. It tells the story of the fall of civilization from deadly disease and the emergence of a new culture with simpler tools. Set in the 1940s in Berkeley, California, the story is told by Isherwood Williams, who emerges from isolation in the mountains only to discover that almost everyone has died.
Earth Abides won the inaugural International Fantasy Award in 1951. It was included in Locus magazine's list of best All Time Science Fiction in 1987 and 1998 and was a nominee to be entered into the Prometheus Hall of Fame some time before 2002.
While working on his graduate thesis in geography in the Sierra Nevada, Ish is bitten by a rattlesnake. As he heals from the bite in a cabin, he gets sick with a disease similar to measles, and he lapses in and out of consciousness. He eventually recovers and makes his way back to civilization, only to discover that it has collapsed after most people have died from the same disease. He decides to go to his home in Berkeley, California. In the city near his home, Ish meets a few survivors and also encounters a friendly and eager dog, which he names Princess, who swiftly adopts Ish as her new master. He sets out on a cross-country tour, traveling all the way to New York City and back, scavenging for food and fuel as he goes. As he travels, he finds small groups of survivors, but has doubts about humanity's ability to survive the loss of civilization.
Ish returns to his home in California. After reading Ecclesiastes, he realizes that he had been throwing his life away. He finds an African American woman named Emma living nearby, and they agree to consider themselves married and have children. Other survivors gradually join them. Over time, the electricity (which had been provided by an automated hydro power station) fails, and the comforts of civilization recede. As the children grow, Ish tries to instill basic academics by teaching reading, writing, arithmetic, and geography, but he is unsuccessful mainly due to the others' lack of interest.
Many children are born in these years, including Joey, Ish's youngest and favorite son. Joey is very similar in nature to Ish, as he demonstrates innate intelligence and a curiosity about the world before the epidemic. This leads Ish to believe that Joey is the key to the future.
22 years after the collapse, the community is flourishing, with the young adapting easily to the de-modernised world. They come to have a better grasp of the natural world than the adults, and when running water fails, the younger generation comes to the rescue, knowing where flowing streams may be found. Ish turns his attention from ecology to his newly forming society, and he notices that the children are becoming very superstitious. One day, Ish asks for his hammer, which he habitually carries around, and finds the children are afraid to touch it as it is a symbol to them of the old times; the long-dead "Americans" of the old world are now viewed like gods, including Ish. Only Joey is willing to touch the hammer, confirming in Ish's mind that he is the future of civilization.
Two of the older boys return from a cross-country trip with a stranger named Charlie, who Ish and the other adults immediately distrust. When it's discovered that Charlie carries multiple dangerous diseases, Ish and the other survivors vote to execute him to prevent transmission. Shortly after Charlie's arrival, the tribe experiences an outbreak of typhoid fever, which kills many, including Joey. Through his despair, Ish is compelled to confront the future with a new set of expectations and hopes. His ambition to restore civilization to its original state is replaced by a more modest, practical one: to convey a few basic survival skills, such as making bows and arrows, which the children find to be excellent playthings.
As the years go by, the community begins to grow corn. Ish presides at meetings, his hammer being a symbol of his status. Though he is respected, many of his ideas are ignored by the younger men. Decades pass, and every original member of the tribe dies except Ish, leaving him as "the Last American."
Hub AI
Earth Abides AI simulator
(@Earth Abides_simulator)
Earth Abides
Earth Abides is a 1949 American post-apocalyptic science fiction novel by George R. Stewart. It tells the story of the fall of civilization from deadly disease and the emergence of a new culture with simpler tools. Set in the 1940s in Berkeley, California, the story is told by Isherwood Williams, who emerges from isolation in the mountains only to discover that almost everyone has died.
Earth Abides won the inaugural International Fantasy Award in 1951. It was included in Locus magazine's list of best All Time Science Fiction in 1987 and 1998 and was a nominee to be entered into the Prometheus Hall of Fame some time before 2002.
While working on his graduate thesis in geography in the Sierra Nevada, Ish is bitten by a rattlesnake. As he heals from the bite in a cabin, he gets sick with a disease similar to measles, and he lapses in and out of consciousness. He eventually recovers and makes his way back to civilization, only to discover that it has collapsed after most people have died from the same disease. He decides to go to his home in Berkeley, California. In the city near his home, Ish meets a few survivors and also encounters a friendly and eager dog, which he names Princess, who swiftly adopts Ish as her new master. He sets out on a cross-country tour, traveling all the way to New York City and back, scavenging for food and fuel as he goes. As he travels, he finds small groups of survivors, but has doubts about humanity's ability to survive the loss of civilization.
Ish returns to his home in California. After reading Ecclesiastes, he realizes that he had been throwing his life away. He finds an African American woman named Emma living nearby, and they agree to consider themselves married and have children. Other survivors gradually join them. Over time, the electricity (which had been provided by an automated hydro power station) fails, and the comforts of civilization recede. As the children grow, Ish tries to instill basic academics by teaching reading, writing, arithmetic, and geography, but he is unsuccessful mainly due to the others' lack of interest.
Many children are born in these years, including Joey, Ish's youngest and favorite son. Joey is very similar in nature to Ish, as he demonstrates innate intelligence and a curiosity about the world before the epidemic. This leads Ish to believe that Joey is the key to the future.
22 years after the collapse, the community is flourishing, with the young adapting easily to the de-modernised world. They come to have a better grasp of the natural world than the adults, and when running water fails, the younger generation comes to the rescue, knowing where flowing streams may be found. Ish turns his attention from ecology to his newly forming society, and he notices that the children are becoming very superstitious. One day, Ish asks for his hammer, which he habitually carries around, and finds the children are afraid to touch it as it is a symbol to them of the old times; the long-dead "Americans" of the old world are now viewed like gods, including Ish. Only Joey is willing to touch the hammer, confirming in Ish's mind that he is the future of civilization.
Two of the older boys return from a cross-country trip with a stranger named Charlie, who Ish and the other adults immediately distrust. When it's discovered that Charlie carries multiple dangerous diseases, Ish and the other survivors vote to execute him to prevent transmission. Shortly after Charlie's arrival, the tribe experiences an outbreak of typhoid fever, which kills many, including Joey. Through his despair, Ish is compelled to confront the future with a new set of expectations and hopes. His ambition to restore civilization to its original state is replaced by a more modest, practical one: to convey a few basic survival skills, such as making bows and arrows, which the children find to be excellent playthings.
As the years go by, the community begins to grow corn. Ish presides at meetings, his hammer being a symbol of his status. Though he is respected, many of his ideas are ignored by the younger men. Decades pass, and every original member of the tribe dies except Ish, leaving him as "the Last American."