I mentioned to someone today that the Rocky Horror lyric "river of night's dreaming" is the title of a short story (that long pre-dates the musical), and he asked if there was a book named Morpheus Flow. I don't think there is, but that's a great title.
Willow ,'Get It Done'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
the Rocky Horror lyric "river of night's dreaming" is the title of a short story
Thank you, I had no idea!
Day of the Triffids = post-apocalyptic, yes? Though it was written after WWII, I think, so possibly not relevant.
Ooh, The War of the Worlds. I should have thought of that. It does have that last-minute bacterial reprieve.
Day of the Triffids goes with all those other early '50s "this is the way the world ends" books. J.G. Ballard practically made a career of destroying the world in different ways for a while.
Hmm there was a sort of post-apocalyptic sci-fi war novel that was published pre WWII, may pre WWI. It was sort of a WW-I that just goes on forever and spreads throughout the world. No nukes needed because no civilian territory left to grow food on, no place free of the horrors of war, disease spreading everywhere as it does in the case of war. Also the soldier all hate the civilians because it was the civilans that created the war. So it looks like the military on all sides will get together and create a giant military dictatorship based on hatred and contempt for civilians. Very chilling, prose kind of leaded, characters two dimensional, world building frighteningly convincing. Based on actual experience of Crimean war or WW I?
Wish I knew the title or author.
The DH and I used this as our dinner topic last night. He immediately mentioned War of the Worlds and Time Machine.
His contribution was that WWI was the genesis of some types of modern horror (see James Whale as an example) including the beginnings of an apocalyptic outlook. Usually people think of the gas attacks, and the fact that localities were assigned together so whole towns could be wiped out, but strategic bombing was developed in WWI. The ability to destroy a civilian center from high altitude, with no possibility of defense had a definite psychological impact (although not as big as the implementors hoped).
The ability to destroy a civilian center from high altitude, with no possibility of defense had a definite psychological impact (although not as big as the implementors hoped).
I had an art history class in college that spent a good long time on the impact of WWI on art - and the reprise of danger from the skies as a topic (Max Ernst & Picasso being her main displays)... both from gods & angels (anything winged, actually) as well as man-made sources. Her point almost to the word matches your DH's, Raq.
Since Spook Country is listed as "on hold" online at my library, and since I DO NOT have an email indicating that it's being held for me, I have to assume I'm somewhere down on the list. Pooh.
I think I'll just pick up Blood Music tonight and ask where I am on the wait list.
I liked Water for Elephants so much that DH read it as soon as I'd finished - which is quite unusual here at Chez Bee. Turns out we don't share a lot of books - only Harry Potter and anything by Dan Simmons. The end of Elephants = best payoff ever. Go read it. Get a smile. And then run off with the circus, why doncha?
Steph, I want to thank you for pimping Kiki Strike. I picked it up on Tuesday (while buying the newest Stephenie Meyer book for the kid) and I'm loving it! So fun!