Tuesday, December 22, 2009

The Blood Artists (1998) novel

Chuck Hogan's 1998 novel The Blood Artists is about a virus that takes on human form and has the capability of destroying humanity. In 2009 co-authored the first volume of The Strain Trilogy with Mexican motion picture director Guillermo del Toro, the subject matter of which is very similar to his earlier novel.

The Strain (2009) novel, Book 1 of the Strain Trilogy

Mexican superstar motion picture director Guillermo del Toro, who lives in Los Angeles, California, USA, and novelist Chuck Hogan, who published a similar work in 1998, The Blood Artists, have teamed up to kill off the world with a vampirism virus in their Strain Trilogy:


  • Book 1, The Strain (2009)


  • Book 2, The Fall (2010)


  • Book 3, The Night Eternal (2011)





In Book 1 that favorite target of doomsday scenarios, New York City, is ground zero for this virus, the likes of which have been seen before.

Category 7 (2007) novel

Bill Evans, a real-life meteorologist (weatherman, not an expert in meteors), and collaborator Marianna Jameson, bring their combined expertise to the novel Cateogry 7 (2007), in which a killer hurricane destroys New York City.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Life After People (2008) documentary

The History Channel documentary Life After People (2008) may be based on Alan Weisman's 2007 book The World Without Us. The computer graphics in this TV account, imagining how ecosystems will recover and weather and lifeforms will break down humanity's greatest and strongest structures, are excellent.

The World Without Us (2007) book

Alan Weisman's non-fiction book The World Without Us (2007) either spawned a mini-industry of imagining Earth without humans or it tapped into a meme that's probably been floating around for a while, taking the popular science fiction theme of the last person on Earth to its ultimate conclusion. Weisman does not impose a doomsday scenario, rather his work is based on a thought experiment, examining how ecosystems would recover should humanity suddenly and totally disappear. He is not concerned with how or why this might happen, just that it does and how the world would move on and over the remains of a human-populated globe.





Friday, December 18, 2009

Kim Stanley Robinson doomsday ecothrillers (2004-2007)

Kim Stanley Robinson published this triology of doomsday ecothrillers between 2004 and 2007:


  1. Forty Signs of Rain (Bantam Books, 2004)

  2. Fifty Degrees Below (Bantam Books, 2005)

  3. Sixty Days and Counting (Bantam Books, 2007)


Monday, December 7, 2009

Have a Nice Doomsday (2007) book

Former Simon Fraser University history professor Nicholas Guyatt, published Have a Nice Doomsday: Why Millions of Americans Are Looking Forward to the End of the World in 2007. He examines the Christian obsession with The Rapture and an apocalyptic viewpoint inspired by a literal interpretation of the last book of the Bible's New Testament, the Revelation of St. John.

Friday, December 4, 2009

I Am Legend (1954) novel

Richard Matheson's 1954 horror novel I Am Legend so scared me just from its description that I never read it. It was adapted into three film versions: The Last Man on Earth (1964) starring Vincent Price, The Omega Man (1971) starring Charlton Heston, which I have seen and I Am Legend (2007) starring Will Smith, which I have also seen.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Three Rapture sites from 2009 newpaper article

A local newspaper article published December 2, 2009 described these three Rapture sites. According to the article, "basic Rapture doctrine says Jesus will unexpectedly return and will bring faithful Christians to Heaven, leaving non-believers and followers of other faiths to face a prolonged period of global strife."

RaptureReady.com, founded by Todd Strandberg of Benton, Arkansas, in 1987, features the weekly Rapture Index. How, if Jesus is returning unexpectedly, this index is supposed to have any predictive value is beyond me. Maybe Jesus will return when the index is at its lowest value rather than its highest.

YouveBeenLeftBehind.com, a subscription-based service, lets its members store messages and e-mail addresses of those they want to reach after the Rapture. But if there's global strife, especially if the time of Tribulation immediately follows the Rapture, would those messages even get delivered?

The atheist-run site Eternal Earthbound Pets is committed all those pets from Christian homes where the owners have ascended to be with Jesus. Poor Spot and Fluffy. But those who think they are bound for Heaven can keep their pets safe by subscribing to this service. What's $110 a pet for peace of enraptured mind?

Monday, November 30, 2009

The Twelve (2009) novel

Judging from the reviews on Amazon.com, William Gladstone's first novel The Twelve (Vanguard Press, 2009) is a badly written story revolving around the silliness surrounding the Mayan Long Count calendar.


Sunday, November 29, 2009

2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl (2006) book

Daniel Pinchbeck's 2006 book 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl is one of the key texts in the global debate around whether the world will end, according to the Mayan Long Count calendar, in December 2012. Pinchbeck is not the most objective of authors on this subject since his book is essentially predicated on the assumption that hallucinogenic (psychedelic) substances such as were used by Mayan shamans, produce knowledge of future events that can or must be accepted as valid.

There is no reason to believe that someone's drug-induced vision of a future has any basis in reality or that the same vision can be reproduced by another person. Further, there is no actual evidence to link the cyclical Long Count calendar with any ancient Mayan prophecy on the subject of the world's end when calendar reaches the end of its current cycle and starts over again. As I have noted elsewhere on this blog, not even the ancient Mayans when the calendar was still in use, believed that the world would end in 2012.

Like any good doomsdayer, Pinchbeck attempts to link his own predictions with current extrapolations about future global collapse with the Mayan Long Count calendar countdown. The problem, however, is that those scientific models are based on scientific observations and at the earliest the models are predicting drastic effects around 2050, well after 2012. In a newspaper article I read about his book ("Cult figure on a mission to unlock the mysteries of 2012", Jamie Portman, Vancouver Sun, November 27, 2009), Pinchbeck did not even list nuclear armageddon as a more likely causal scenario for global destruction brought about through competition for depleted resources by an overpopulated world.

While Pinchbeck has an outstanding resume as an author, I think anyone who spends a great deal of time dissecting crop circles and their relationship to the Mayan calendar as well as their own personal life, is not the most objective analyst of the historical record.

Monday, November 23, 2009

The Aftermath (1982) movie

The Aftermath (1982) is a direct-to-video movie about two astronauts who return from a mission to find a gang and mutant-infested Los Angeles as the result of a nuclear war.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Legion (2010) movie

In the 2010 movie Legion the Angels of the Lord return to exterminate Mankind. And just when we thought things could not get any worse, humanity's only salvation is a single angel, Michael, who decides to help us and some strangers, including the mother of the unborn Savior, in a desert diner. I suppose the food there is just as bad.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Path of Destruction (2005) TV movie

Nanobots unleashed after an accident on an oil drilling platform threaten to destroy the world by producing bad weather, bad acting and bad special effects in the 2005 TV movie Path of Destruction. Somehow the United States military is also to blame, but then they've always been an easy target.

Seven Signs of the Apocalypse (2009) TV documentary

This 2009 TV documentary, Seven Signs of the Apocalypse, looks at the end of world from the perspective of the Bible's New Testament's Book of Revelation as interpreted from a scientific viewpoint. From the few minutes I glimpsed, there seemed to be a lot of nuclear explosions and planetary impacts. This was broadcast on Canada's History Television on November 15, 2009, possibly to exploit the November 13 premiere of the movie 2012.

Nostradamus: 2012 (TV) documentary

Nostradamus and 2012, what more could an apocalypticholic wish for? This 2009 TV documentary, Nostradamus: 2012, was broadcast on Canada's History Television on November 15, 2009, likely to coincide with the premiere of the movie 2012 on November 13 and the United States' History Channel.

Update for July 1, 2010: I watched the DVD version and it's as bad as I remember it. One of the best factual bloopers is when the narrator states that the Mayans are thought to have observed the galactic alignment of around 26,000 years ago and that their Long Calender cycle, which is supposed to coincide with the next galactic alignment, was an astonishing astronomical prediction. There was a caption that appeared at one point after the narrator's bold statement that said "The Maya 2000 BC to 1500 AD."

What is this galactic alignment you're probably asking? According to this program it's when the sun appears to rise and pass across the center of the Milky Way galaxy, an area known as the Dark (better known as the Great) Rift according to these experts. One "expert," Lawrence Joseph (Apocalypse 2012) stated that the last galactic alignment coincided with the end of the last ice age. Nothing could be further from the truth since it's long been established and accepted that the last ice age, in which much of North America and Europe/Asia were covered by glacial ice sheets, ended around 10,000 years ago.

All the hype about 2012 is nothing more than fear-mongering with a very distinct anthropomorphic flavor. Assuming there is intelligent life elsewhere in this vast galaxy of ours, it's doubtful that they have any concerns at all about a galactic alignment that will have neither an impact on Earth or on any other part of the Milky Way. We are so far away from the Great Rift that the whole concept of the sun somehow aligning with the center of the Milky Way and causing catastrophic changes on Earth is ludicrous.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Terminator movies (1984-2009) and TV series (2008-2009)

The Terminator movie and TV series are among the most powerful, post-apocalyptic dramas ever created. The basic premise is an age-old science fiction theme, that of sentient or intelligent machines that decide to eliminate humanity. The first three movies starred California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger as the unstoppable Terminator robot sent back to kill a single human in order to effect a change in the future. He also made a digital cameo appearance in the 2009 Terminator movie. The first three Terminator movie were co-written and directed by James Cameron and made him a major player in Hollywood.

Here are the existing live-action movies and TV series up to December 2009:

The Terminator (1984)
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)
Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003)
Terminator Salvation (2009)

Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles (TV series, 2008-2009)

Friday, September 11, 2009

After the Fall of New York (1983) movie

The 1983 Italian movie After the Fall of New York is a post-apocalyptic boy-chases-girl plot; she happens to be the last fertile woman alive, at least in the ruins of Manhattan.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Aftershock (1990)

What if the aliens arrived after the apocalypse? This is what transpires in the 1990 movie Aftershock. Only it's technically not an invasion, just a single alien with a helpful attitude.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

The Day After (1983) movie

The chillingly realistic docu-drama The Day After (1983) depicted a nuclear missile exchange between the United States and the Soviet Union in the early 1980s. Some of the most compelling scenes are of the Minuteman missile launches from silos in Kansas. Jason Robards, Jobeth Williams, John Lithgow and Steven Guttenberg were among the stars of this terrifying and haunting film directed by Nicholas Meyer and written by Edward Hume. Unlike the TV series Jericho, no punches were pulled in showing the devastating impact a nuclear attack would cause. At the end of the movie we are cautioned that an actual attack would have caused much more destruction than seen in the movie.

Monday, September 7, 2009

2012 and Counting (2009) article

Skeptic magazine (vol. 15, no. 2, 2009) published an article by David Morrison titled "2012 and Counting: A NASA Scientist Answers the Top 20 Questions About 2012." Most of the article is about the bogus (fictional) planet Nibiru, also known as Planet X, around which there is supposed to be a conspiracy to conceal its existence. According to Morrison's introduction, "I answer questions from the public submitted on-line to a NASA website (astrobiology.nasa.gov), and over the past two years the Nibiru-2012 doomsday has become the dominant topic people ask about."

The Doomsday Clock

The Doomsday Clock was conceived by the board of directors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists at the University of Chicago and made its first appearance in 1947. The clock conveys in a very graphic way the number of minutes left before humanity destroys the world with nuclear weapons. Since 2007 the clock has been set to 5 minutes before midnight. The Wikipedia entry on the Doomsday Clock contains many more fascinating details, including how the clock has been incorporated into popular culture.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Fallen Earth computer game

With its tag line of Welcome to the Apocalypse, the Fallen Earth online, multiplayer computer game promises hours of doom-ridden gameplay in the 21st century after a combination of a deadly virus and nuclear weapons nearly destroy all of humanity.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Mad Max (1979, 1981, 1985, 2015) movies

The movie that brought Australian actor Mel Gibson to an American audience, Mad Max (1979) is set in a desolate, post-apocalyptic Australia where gasoline and oil are the new currencies. The sequel was titled Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior (1981) and the third film was called Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985). The third film co-starred Tina Turner. The fourth film, also directed by George Miller, was called Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) and starred Tom Hardy as Max Rockatansky and Charlize Theron as Imperator Furiosa. A fifth film, again with George Miller directing, is in the works and currently titled "Mad Max: The Wasteland."

For further details about the film and its background see the Mad Max Wiki.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

The 13th Immortal (1957) novel

Robert Silverberg's 1957 novel The 13th Immortal is set in the post-apocalyptic future of the 26th century which followed the Years of the Freeze (2062-2527). On this far future Earth, 12 immortal humans have divided the world into 12 dukedoms. The title refers to the mystery of a 13th immortal human on the Antarctic continent. The 13th Immortal, written when Silverberg was 21 and originally published by Ace, was reissued in 2004 by Dorchester Publishing (New York, NY) in collaboration with Wildside Press under the latter's Cosmos Books imprint (ISBN 0-8439-5951-7).

Jericho (2006-2008) TV series

The Jericho (2006-2008) TV series was not quite the end of the world but it was the end of life as you know it in the United States, which was subjected to devastating nuclear attacks by unknown forces. Skeet Ulrich starred in this unusual drama in which survivors in a Kansas town came to grips with life after the nuclear apocalypse. Somehow the weather conditions never seemed to turn against them, which was the most unbelievable part.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

The Last Man on Earth (1982) anthology

Edited by Isaac Asimov, Martin Harry Greenberg and Charles G. Waugh, The Last Man on Earth (1982) anthology of short fiction contains the following gems of speculative fiction:

"The Underdweller" (1957) by William F. Nolan
"Flight to Forever" (1950) by Poul Anderson
"Trouble with Ants" (1951) by Clifford Simak
"The Coming of the Ice" (1926) by G. Peyton Wertenbaker
"The Most Sentimental Man" (1957) by Evelyn E. Smith
"Eddie for Short" (1953) by Wallace West
"Knock" (1948) by Frederic Brown
"Original Sin" (1949) by S. Fowler Wright
"A Man Spekith" (1969) by Richard Wilson
"In the World's Dusk" (1936) by Edmund Hamilton
"Kindness" (1944) by Lester del Rey
"Lucifer" (1964) by Roger Zelazny
"Resurrection" (1948) by A.E. van Vogt
"The Second-Class Citizen" (1963) by Damon Knight
"Day of Judgement" (1946) by Edmund Hamilton
"Continuous Performance" (1974) by Gordon Eklund
"The New Reality" (1950) by Charles L. Harness

Monday, August 31, 2009

The Day the Earth Caught Fire (1961) movie

The Day the Earth Caught Fire, a 1961 British movie, was co-written, directed and produced by Val Guest, better known for his movie The Quatermass Xperiment. The film's doomsday scenario has the Soviet Union and the United simultaneously exploding nuclear bombs with devastating consequences: the Earth's axis is not only tilted to produce bizarre weather patterns due to the shift of the equator, but the Earth's orbit is also changed and it's sent on a path towards the Sun. The movie, in glorious black and white, is notable for the red tinted sequences to simulate the heat of a truly scorched Earth. The film also has some great effects of a dried up Thames River in London, England.

The Doomsday Key (2009) novel

The Doomsday Key (2009) novel by James Rollins seesaws between the past and present and a threat to mankind's existence locked within an artifact called the Doomsday Key

Sunday, August 30, 2009

City of Ember (2008) movie

The tween novel City of Ember: The First Book of Ember (2003) by Jeanne DuPrau appears to have translated well into a movie adaptation starring Bill Murray as the Mayor of Ember, with the two young protagonists played by Saoirse Ronan in the role of Lina Mayfleet, a messenger, and Harry Treadaway as Doon Harrow, who works in the underground Pipeworks. Tim Robbins is the other big star and he plays Doon's father, Loris Harrow, an inventor of gadgets and contraptions.

I was particularly struck by the ominous, opening voiceover: "On the day the world ended the future of mankind was carried in a small metal box." The City of Ember reminded me throughout of the computer game Fallout 3 and the Vault where people lived and didn't know that there was a post-nuclear holocaust world outside.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Doomsday (2008) movie

The 2008 movie Doomsday is about a virus that's hit the United Kingdom and threatens the rest of humanity with extinction. Except for setting this in the future and giving it a science fiction spin, does this not sound a lot like 28 Days Later (2002) and its sequel 28 Weeks Later (2007), the zombie-laden horror films also set in the same location. Well, ok, they aren't really zombies in the latter two films, nor are there any in Doomsday, just very angry, sick people who have to be killed before they tear innocent, unaffected people apart.

The main plot of the movie, set in the year 2035, is about a woman soldier played by Rhona Mitra who leads a team back into Glasgow, the original vector for the spread of the virus, to try and find a cure for the virus that the politicians believe exists based on the satellite evidence of survivors first seen in 2032.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

The Core (2003) movie

In the 2003 movie The Core, Earth's core has stopped spinning and within the geomagnetic force to which some forms of life have adapted, not only do mysterious catastrophes begin to occur but at least one geophysicist has figured out what's going on. Even more unbelievably, not only is there a device capable of reaching the Earth's core, an unlikely plan to restart its rotation by exploding nuclear bombs is devised. Since the United States Army had caused the Earth's core to stop rotating, it's totally up to U.S.A. technology and heroes to spin it up again save us all from doomsday.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Waterworld (1995) movie and novel tie-in

On a future Earth the polar icecaps have melted and civilization has vanished, with most land being submerged. Pockets of people exist on relics of floating vessels and whatever parts of land are above the waves. In the 1995 post-apocalyptic movie Waterworld and the novel tie-in by Max Allan Collins, Kevin Costner stars as a drifter in a trimaran who aids a woman and a young girl who are trying to find a mythical place called Dryland.

Monday, August 24, 2009

The Road (2009) movie

Based on the 2006 novel of the same name by Cormac McCarthy, the 2009 movie The Road sounds like a cheerless vision of a post-apocalyptic world in which a father and son struggle to find a place they can call home.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

The Last Night of the World (1951) short story

Ray Bradbury is one of my favorite authors and he too has written his share of end-of-the-world stories. This one gets right to it in the title and it is literal to its meaning. In 1951, "The Last Night of the World" was pegged at October 19, 1969. But we're still here.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

The Rest is Speculation (2009) short story

Eric Brown's short story "The Rest is Speculation" was first published in the anthology The Mammoth Book of Mindblowing SF edited by Mike Ashley. The story is compelling and mindblowing indeed as we witness the tragic and grand end of Earth and the solar system while simultaneously witnessing the birth of a new universe, about which, as the title says, the rest is speculation.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Post-Apocalyptic Science Fiction (2004) article

John Joseph Adams, the editor of the short story anthology Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse (2008), published an article in the Internet Review of Science Fiction titled "Post-Apocalyptic Science Fiction" (January 2004). The article contains a bibliography of essential novels, short fiction, anthologies and "other recommended works."

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Nuclear Holocausts: Atomic War in Fiction (2003-) bibliography

Paul Brians, a Professor of English at Washington State University, Pullman, Washington, first published in 2003 an online "comprehensive survey of fictional depictions in English of nuclear war and its aftermath" titled Nuclear Holocausts: Atomic War in Fiction.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Fuel computer game

The computer game Fuel is set in a future North America modeled on parts of the Pacific Northwest, California and possibly Nevada. Global warming has wreaked havoc with weather systems and vast territories have been abandoned in the face of environmental disasters. Youthful drivers have taken over these areas and race a wide variety of vehicles, including muscle cars, motorcycles, ATVs (called quads in the game), monster trucks and SUVs. Somehow, there's always another cache of fuel around the next tree or bush or on the top of the many abandoned buildings.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Half-Life 2 computer game series

The Half-Life 2 computer game series is set on a future Earth that's been taken over by an alien group known as The Combine from another dimension, elsewhere in the universe or even another universe. This invasion occurred after a portal was opened into that dimension or other place during the action in an earlier game called Half-Life (1998). Half-Life 2 was released in 2004 and a subsequent trilogy of episodes started appearing in 2006 (Half-Life 2: Episode One) and 2007 (Half-Life 2: Episode Two). Half-Life 2: Episode Three has not been released as of August 2009.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Fallout computer game series

The first Fallout computer game was released in 1997, Fallout 2 was released in 1998 and Fallout 3 was released in 2008. The game is set in the 22nd century but the world resembles what we imagined a post-nuclear world war would look like in the 1950s.

On the Beach (1957) novel

Australian author Nevil Shute's On the Beach published in 1957 during the first decade of the Cold War capitalized on Western fears of a nuclear war that would destroy North America and pollute the rest of the world with deadly radiation. The bulk of the novel is set is Australia.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

The Drowned World (1962) novel

Science fiction authors on occasion mimic catastrophes of Biblical and scientific proportions by projecting from current conditions and imagining, as J.G. Ballard did in his 1962 novel The Drowned World, a global flood and extreme weather conditions caused by melted icecaps induced by solar radiation. The novel was expanded from a novella published in a magazine the same year.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Armageddon (1941) short story

Fredric Brown specialized in short stories with a surprise ending. In his 1941 tale "Armageddon" a boy at a magic show manages to save the world from certain satanic doom with something very special inside his water pistol. And for that he gets punished by his father.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

History Lesson (1949) short story

Venusians visit an Earth in the far future that is still experiencing a devastating, global ice age. What they discover hidden atop a mountain cave that has survived the glaciers will both stun and amuse you. Arthur C. Clarke's 1949 short story "History Lesson" is a true gem.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

The Hammer of God (1993) novel

You'll notice that fiction about doomsday that associates God with the event may use either the word hammer or fist. Arthur C. Clarke's novel The Hammer of God is set in the 22nd century where the technology isn't much better than it is today at stopping a giant asteroid headed to Earth because Murphy's Law works equally well in the future as it does today.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Lucifer's Hammer (1977) novel

Science fiction authors Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle's Lucifer's Hammer examines what would happen if a comet hits the Earth. It's a terrific read.

Monday, August 10, 2009

2012: The War for Souls (2007) novel

Whitley Strieber's 2012: The War for Souls continues his 2006 novel The Grays. In 2012, he couples the Mayan prophecy of the end of the world with an alien invasion.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Field Guide to the Apocalypse (2005)

Meghann Marco's Field Guide to the Apocalypse: Movie Survival Skills for the End of the World is a humorous examination of the kinds of post-apocalyptic worlds we can expect and how to survive in them.

Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse (2008) anthology

Edited by John Joseph Adams, Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse is an anthology of stories about human survival after the collapse of civilization through one means or another. The story dates are their copyright dates. The anthology includes a bibliography of post-apocalyptic fiction. The book's Web site includes the edictor's introduction to each story, story excerpts, information about the story authors and a book video trailer created by Tobias S. Buckell, with music by Jack Kincaid.

The stories are:

"The End of the Whole Mess" (1986) by Stephen King
"Salvage" (1986) by Orson Scott Card
"The People of Sand and Slag" (2004) by Paolo Bacigalupi
"Bread and Bombs" (2003) by M. Rickert
"How We Got in Town and Out Again" (1996) by Jonathan Lethem
"Dark, Dark Were the Tunnels" (1973) by George R.R. Martin
"Waiting for the Zephyr" (2002) by Tobias S. Buckell
"Never Despair" (1997) by Jack McDevitt
"When Sysadmins Ruled the Earth" (2006) by Cory Doctorow
"The Last of the O-Forms" (2002) by James Van Pelt
"Still Life with Apocalypse" (2002) by Richard Kadrey
"Artie's Angels" (2001) by Catherine Wells Dimenstein
"Judgment Passed" (2008) by Jerry Oltion
"Mute" (2002) by Gene Wolfe
"Inertia" (1990) by Nancy Kress
"And the Deep Blue Sea" (2005) by Elizabeth Bear
"Speech Sounds" (1983) by Octavia E. Butler
"Killers" (2006) by Carol Emshwiller
"Ginny Sweethips' Flying Circus" (1988) by Neal Barrett, Jr.
"The End of the World as We Know It" (2004) by Dale Bailey
"A Song Before Sunset" (1976) by David Rowland Grigg
"Episode Seven: Last Stand Against the Pack in the Kingdom of the Purple Flowers" (2007) by John Langan

Nemesis (1998) novel

Kind of a Da Vinci Code meets Revelations, Bill Napier's thriller Nemesis is about an asteroid of that name headed to Earth ... or is it. A 17th century Latin manuscript somehow figures in the plot. Not content with blowing up the asteroid, the Americans want to blow up the Russians instead.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

No Morning After (1954) short story

In his darkly humorous look at doomsday, "No Morning After," Arthur C. Clarke has a telepathic race of extraterrestrials contact a man to warn him of the Earth's imminent destruction from its sun going nova. In order to save the Earth's population, the aliens will create wormholes all over the Earth and through which people can enter to instantly find themselves on a new world. All the contactee has to do is inform others of what to do. Due to his personal problems, however, things don't go as planned for the aliens, except for the part about the sun exploding just as they had calculated it.

Friday, August 7, 2009

A Canticle for Leibowitz (1960) novel

Considered one of the finest post-nuclear apocalyptic novels, A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller, Jr., can be tedious at times. But if you have not read any doomsday fiction before, this is not necessarily the work to start with. The beginning is a lot better than the middle and conclusion.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

The Nine Billion Names of God (1953) short story

Arthur C. Clarke (1917-2008), one of my favorite science fiction authors, like several other sci-fi authors, has written his share of short stories and novels around the general theme of planetary destruction, the destruction of civilization as we know it, or far-future societies on the verge of experiencing their end. One of his best short stories, first published in 1953, on the theme of not just planetary destruction but the destruction of the universe is "The Nine Billion Names of God." In this story Tibetan monks utilize modern technology (a device Clarke calls an Automatic Sequence Computer) to complete their list of all the names of God. When their work is done, the world will end.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Deep Impact (1998)

Quite possibly the finest asteroid or comet impact movie made in the 20th century, this movie also starred Elijah Wood prior to his Lord of the Rings trilogy. A comet or asteroid heading to Earth can't be stopped despite actor Robert Duvall and his astronaut crew's best attempt to blow it up. Once again it's up to the U.S. government to save humanity from extinction by randomly selecting through a lottery system 800,000 ordinary citizens as well as 200,000 of the elite (scientists, doctors, artists and so on). These million get to live out this extinction event in caves. A ray of hope, however, is offered at the end when Wood and his girlfriend, who hasn't been selected for the caves as Wood's family was, outrace a giant tsunami and reach the safety of a hilltop.

This was not the only planetary impact movie of the year, as Bruce Willis starred in the Biblically titled Armageddon, a much less realistic depiction of what might happen.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Independence Day (1996)

Roland Emmerich wrote and directed the alien invasion saga Independence Day tied to the U.S. Independence Day and that starred Will Smith. The Earth seems doomed by superior exterrestrial technology, but the American way of life must go on and so it does. Somehow the U.S. fighter jets all seem to work perfectly. Why is it, I wonder, that the aliens always pick on the USA.

Monday, August 3, 2009

When Worlds Collide (1933) novel and movie (1951)

I remember reading as a teenager Edwin Balmer and Philip Wylie's 1933 novel When Worlds Collide and being frightened by it. In their scenario, rather than Planet X (Nemesis or Niburu), which is hypothesized as being part of our solar system, another planet they call Zyra comes careening into our solar system and smacks into the Earth. Some resourceful people manage to build a spaceship and launch themselves to get away.

I didn't think the sequel, After Worlds Collide (1934) was half as good.

A movie, When Worlds Collide, was released in 1951. I saw it many years after first reading the novel and did not think it as good.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

The Day After Tomorrow (2004) movie

Remember the lesson of this movie: send your kid to the public library in times of global catastrophe and tell him to wait for you. Of course that's not what actually happened in doomsday megahits director Roland Emmerich's 2004 movie The Day After Tomorrow. While some people think that global warming will lead to another ice age, the other probability is that we'll have a hothouse planet. In this movie the ice age seems to impact only the northern hemisphere, so it's not as bad as it sounds.

Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009) movie

Those Decepticon robots! They are bad. But we have the Autobots led by Optimus Prime, and his human mascot Sam Witwicky (Shia LaBeouf) on our side. If only they hadn't hidden the sun-killing device at the peak of the Great Pyramid in Egypt, I would have believed that the world was in mortal peril. Haven't there been studies of the innards of the Great Pyramid through imaging technology? It was fun though seeing this World Heritage Site being decimated by a giant vacuuming robot.

Meteor (2009) TV movie

I didn't realize at first that the 2009 TV movie Meteor broadcast in two parts on July 12 and 19 was a remake of the 1979 feature film of the same title. The premise is the same for both: a comet hits an asteroid and changes its orbit. What are the odds that the asteroid will head straight to Earth? In Hollywood, it's always 1 to 1 odds where asteroids and meteors and their chances of striking Earth and obliterating the planet or human civilization are concerned.

Christopher Lloyd, who plays an astronomer with a "cry wolf" reputation for a Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) official played by Jason Alexander, was billed as one of the stars. Lloyd's character, who seemed to be a remix of his Back to the Future one, was killed off fairly early in part one. His female protege goes through a series of unbelievable adventures, including stumbling into a Mexican police station that's been taken over by either on-site prisoners or escaped inmates from a prison. She manages to escape, all the while clutching her laptop computer with its precious calculations on the trajectory of an asteroid named Kassandra heading to Earth. A number of sub-plots are played out, all of which are rather contrived and some of the main characters in these different sub-plots converge at the end of part 2.

Of course the Earth is saved from a horrible fate when the young female astronomer manages to convince the U.S. military to reprogram their nuclear missiles and those of the Russians and Chinese while in flight and minutes before they're set to impact the asteroid so that the missiles will detonate before impact and with their blast cushion deflect the asteroid away from the Earth and also not let nuclear radiation poison the atmosphere. Whew, I'm glad we were able to stop that from happening. The TV movie ends rather gloomily, however, when in the concluding scene the female astronomer tells the male lead character of another asteroid headed our way in a few years time for yet another close call.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

2012 the movie

The one trailer I've seen in theaters so far for the movie 2012 looks impressive -- a tsunami engulfs the Himalayas and overwhelms a monk who's sounded the alarm -- all caused by Planet X, also known as Nemesis or Niburu (the Destroyer). so I'm anxious to learn what's caused this catastrophe Clearly, Mr. Monk didn't need to bother since nobody would be left to hear or heed his warning. The full trailer at the official site is spectacular. Roland Emmerich, the genius director of two other mega-death movies, Independence Day and The Day After Tomorrow, turns his attention to the powerful Mayan prophecy that the world will end on December 21, 2012. Now if the ancient Mayans had somehow synchronized their timekeeping efforts with the Western world’s calendar and had the world ending on December 20, 2012 (get it, 20122012 as some people might express the date), I might have been a believer, but then again, maybe all the big disasters are happening on December 20 and the world officially ends on December 21, 2012. The 2012 movie premieres on November 13, 2009. Watch the full trailer and a teaser trail on the official site.

In addition to the trailers, check out some of the movie publicity sites: This Is The End from some dude named Charlie Frost -- I'm pretty sure Sony Pictures dreamed him up -- but he's even on Twitter, The IHC or Institute for Human Continuity, whose mission is to prepare the world for 2012, and Farewell Atlantis, the title of the novel by Jackson Curtis, the character played by John Cusack in 2012.

Friday, July 31, 2009

A new fiction about the end of the world in 2012

The Year 2012 Bandwagon is getting a lot more crowded. Artist Brian D'Amato's novel In the Courts of the Sun (2009) weighs in at a hefty 882 pages. It's only volume 1 of a trilogy called the Sacrifice Game Trilogy. The second volume will appear in 2010. The dustjack copy erroneously compares the first volume to Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon -- I think a more apt comparison would be Stephenson's own historical trilogy The Baroque Cycle, though Cryptonomicon like D'Amato's novel does yo-yo between the past and present -- Jorge Luis Borges' Labyrinths and Gary Jennings Aztec.