List of nuclear holocaust fiction
This list of nuclear holocaust fiction lists the many works of speculative fiction that attempt to describe a world during or after a massive nuclear war, nuclear holocaust, or crash of civilization due to a nuclear electromagnetic pulse.
Films
Television programs
- A Day Called 'X' (CBS, 1957)
- The War Game (BBC, 1965)
- Level Seven (BBC, 1966), adapted by J. B. Priestley for Out of the Unknown
- Genesis II (CBS, 1973)
- Planet Earth (ABC, 1974)
- Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (NBC, 1979)
- World War III miniseries (1982)
- Whoops Apocalypse (ITV, 1982)
- Special Bulletin (NBC, 1983)
- Testament (PBS, 1983)
- The Day After (ABC, 1983)
- Countdown to Looking Glass (HBO, 1984)
- Threads (BBC, 1984)
- By Dawn's Early Light (HBO, 1990)
- Woops! (Fox, 1992)
- Fail Safe (CBS, 2000)
- On the Beach (Showtime, 2000)
- Battlestar Galactica (Sci-Fi, 2003, 2004–2009)
- Jericho (CBS, 2006–2008)
- Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles (Fox, 2008–2009)
- Adventure Time (Cartoon Network, 2010–)
- The 100 (The CW, 2014–)
Television episodes
- Masters of Science Fiction: "A Clean Escape" (2007)
- The Motorola Television Hour: "Atomic Attack" (1954 ABC-TV series Season 1, Episode 15) A family living 50 miles away try to flee from the fallout of an atomic bomb that fell on New York City. Based on the novel _Shadow on the Hearth_ (1950) by author Judith Merrill.
- The Twilight Zone: "Time Enough at Last" (1959)
- Playhouse 90: "Alas, Babylon" (1960)
- The Twilight Zone: "The Old Man in the Cave" (1963)
- Star Trek: "Space Seed" (1967)
- Star Trek: "Assignment: Earth" (1968) The crew goes back in time to find out how the human race was able to survive the Cold War.
- The Twilight Zone: "A Little Peace and Quiet" (1985)
- The Twilight Zone: "Quarantine" (1986)
- The Twilight Zone: "Shelter Skelter" (1987)
- The Outer Limits: "Bits of Love" (1997)
- The Outer Limits: "The Human Factor" (2002)
- The Twilight Zone: "Chosen" (2002)
- A few episodes of Star Trek: Enterprise depict both humans and Vulcans as being close to extermination caused by nuclear war.
Novels
- Alas, Babylon by Pat Frank
- Amnesia Moon by Jonathan Lethem (regarding Hatfork)
- Ape and Essence by Aldous Huxley
- Arc Light by Eric Harry
- Armageddon's Children By Terry Brooks (2006) (Genesis of Shannara Trilogy book 1)
- The Ashes Series by William W. Johnstone
- Brother in the Land by Robert Swindells
- A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller, Jr. (1960)
- Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut
- Children of the Dust by Louise Lawrence
- The Chrysalids by John Wyndham
- Commander-1 by Peter George
- Damnation Alley by Roger Zelazny
- Dark December by Alfred Coppel[2]
- Dark Mirrors (original title) Schwarte Spiegel by Arno Schmidt
- Davy and other works by Edgar Pangborn
- The Day They H-Bombed Los Angeles by Robert Moore Williams
- Deathlands series by a variety of authors writing under the pen name James Axler
- Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb by Philip K. Dick
- Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Phillip K. Dick
- Domain by James Herbert
- Doomday Wing by George H. Smith
- Doomsday Plus Twelve by James D. Forman
- Down to a Sunless Sea by David Graham
- Earthwreck! by Thomas N. Scortia
- The Eclipse Trilogy by John Shirley
- Einstein's Monsters by Martin Amis
- End of the World by Dean Owen (novelization of the film Panic in Year Zero!)
- Endworld series by David Robbins
- Eon by Greg Bear
- The Erthing Cycle by Wayland Drew
- Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
- Farnham's Freehold by Robert A. Heinlein
- Fire Brats by Scott Siegel and Barbara Siegel
- First Angel by Ed Mann, published by Soldier of Fortune magazine
- Free Flight by Douglas Terman
- The Gate to Women's Country by Sheri S. Tepper
- A Gift Upon the Shore by M. K. Wren
- God's Grace by Bernard Malamud
- The Guardians series by Richard Austin
- The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
- Jenny, My Diary by Yorick Blumenfeld
- The Last Children of Schewenborn by Gudrun Pausewang
- The Last Ship by William Brinkley
- Level 7 by Mordecai Roshwald
- The Long Loud Silence by Wilson Tucker
- The Long Tomorrow by Leigh Brackett
- Long Voyage Back by George Cockcroft, under the pen name Luke Rhinehart, 1983
- Malevil by Robert Merle
- Metro 2033 by Dmitry Glukhovsky
- Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell
- Not This August by C.M. Kornbluth
- Obernewtyn and subsequent novels in the series by Isobelle Carmody
- On the Beach by Nevil Shute
- One Second After by William R. Forstchen
- The Outward Urge, by John Wyndham and Lucas Parkes
- The Pelbar Cycle, Book One (Beyond Armageddon) by Paul O. Williams
- Plan of Attack, a 2004 thriller by Dale Brown
- The Postman, a 1985 post-apocalyptic novel by David Brin
- Prayers for the Assassin, by Robert Ferrigno
- Red Alert, by Peter George
- Resurrection Day by Brendan DuBois
- Riddley Walker by Russell Hoban
- Prime Directive, by Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens (A Star Trek novel where an alien civilization is apparently destroyed by a sudden, unexpected nuclear war among its own people.)
- Pulling Through, by Dean Ing (first half of the book is a novel on a family surviving a nuclear blast, the second half was a non-fiction survival guide)
- The School for Atheists by Arno Schmidt
- Second Ending, by James White
- The Seventh Day by Hans Hellmut Kirst (original title Keiner Kommt Davon)
- Shadow on the Hearth by Judith Merril (1950) A novel about a young housewife's ordeals in the aftermath of nuclear attack
- The Silo Series by Hugh Howey(2011) A nuclear exchange is used to cover up a nano-bot attack
- Single Combat by Dean Ing (second in the Ted Quantril trilogy)
- A Small Armageddon by Mordecai Roshwald
- Star Man's Son by Andre Norton (1952) a post-apocalyptic novel that takes place about two centuries after the Great-Blowup. This story is also entitled Daybreak - 2250 AD in reprint editions.
- The Steel, the Mist, and the Blazing Sun by Christopher Anvil
- The Survivalist by Jerry Ahern
- Swan Song by Robert McCammon
- Systemic Shock by Dean Ing (first in the Ted Quantril trilogy)
- Tengu by Graham Masterton
- Test of Fire by Ben Bova
- There Will Be Time by Poul Anderson
- This Is the Way the World Ends by James Morrow
- This Time Tomorrow by Lauran Paine
- Tomorrow! by Philip Wylie
- Trinity's Child by William Prochnau (1983)
- Triumph by Philip Wylie
- The Valley-Westside War by Harry Turtledove
- Vaneglory by George Turner
- Viper Three by Walter Wager
- Warday by Whitley Strieber and James Kunetka
- When the Wind Blows, by Raymond Briggs
- Wild Country by Dean Ing (Third in the Ted Quantril Trilogy)
- The Wild Shore by Kim Stanley Robinson
- The World Next Door by Brad Ferguson
- The World Set Free by H. G. Wells
- Worldwar series by Harry Turtledove (alternate history: World War II turns nuclear in 1943, another nuclear war in the 1960s)
- Z for Zachariah by Robert C. O'Brien
- The Zone series by James Rouch[3]
Short stories
- "The Blast" by Stuart Cloete (1947), published in 6 Great Short Novels of Science Fiction, ed. Groff Conklin, 1954
- "Thunder and Roses" (1947) by Theodore Sturgeon
- "Not with a Bang" (1949) by Damon Knight
- "The Last Word" (1956) by Damon Knight
- "A Clean Escape" (1985) by John Kessel
- "The 16th October 1985" (2009) by James Plumridge
- "The Edge of the Knife" (1957) by H. Beam Piper[4]
- "Lot" (1953) and "Lot's Daughter" (1954) by Ward Moore (inspiration for the film Panic in Year Zero!)
- "There Will Come Soft Rains" by Ray Bradbury (1951)
- "Preview of the War We Do Not Want", published in Collier's Magazine (1951)
- "If I Forget Thee, Oh Earth" by Arthur C. Clarke a short story featuring a boy living in a colony on the moon, left isolated by the destruction of the Earth.
- "A Boy and His Dog" by Harlan Ellison (1969)
- "Fermi and Frost" by Frederik Pohl (1985)
- "Tight Little Stitches In A Dead Man's Back" by Joe R. Lansdale (1986)
- "The Custodians" by Richard Cowper
Short Story collections
- Countdown To Midnight, 1984 edited by H. Bruce Franklin
- Beyond Armageddon, 1985 edited by Walter M. Miller, Jr. and Martin Harry Greenberg
- Nuclear War, 1988 edited by Gregory Benford and Martin Harry Greenberg
Comics
- 2000AD/Judge Dredd, set in a post war Earth where the majority of the United States is called the "Cursed Earth".
- Akira features Tokyo after a nuclear conflict.
- AXA, set in the aftermath of a nuclear- and biological war with heroine AXA fighting against evil.
- Barefoot Gen, Japanese manga about life after the Hiroshima bombing
- Cobalt 60 by Vaughn Bodē, Mark Bodē and Larry Todd set in a post-apocalyptic world
- Fist of the North Star, a Japanese comic franchise set in a post-nuclear Earth.
- Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, a Japanese graphic novel, later partly adapted in film, set in a far, post-apocalyptic future, rife with themes of bioethics, environmentalism, genetics and psionics.
- The Punisher - The End, a one shot issue of Marvel Comic's Punisher by Garth Ennis and Richard Corben.
- V for Vendetta by Alan Moore and David Lloyd is set in an England which has survived through a nuclear war which devastated the majority of the rest of the world.
- Strontium dog, set in a post - nuclear war earth where many humans have been deformed by the radiation and are branded as 'mutants'.
Animation shorts
- The Big Snit (National Film Board of Canada, Richard Condie; 1985)
- The Hole featuring the voice of Dizzy Gillespie
Music
- "1983... (A Merman I Should Turn to Be)" by Jimi Hendrix
- "1999" by Prince, from the album 1999
- "540,000 Degrees Fahrenheit" by Fear Factory
- "99 Luftballons" by Nena
- "2 Minutes to Midnight" by Iron Maiden, on the subject of the Cold War
- "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall", by Bob Dylan
- "Aftermath" by Armored Saint
- "Aftershock" by Anthrax
- "Against The Machines", by Downlink Featuring Datsik, on one of the albums called Dubstep. The song features machinery sounds and 'techno' beats with voice-over references to The Terminator Franchise including a line about the survivors of the nuclear fire.
- "Arise" by Sepultura
- "As It Was, As It Soon Shall Be" by Exodus, on the album The Atrocity Exhibition... Exhibit A
- "As The End Draws Near" by Manufacture, featuring Sarah McLachlan on vocals
- "As The World Burns" by Bolt Thrower on the album The IVth Crusade
- "Atomchild" by Underground Zero
- "Beneath the Remains" by Sepultura
- "Blackened" by Metallica, the first track off their fourth album, ...And Justice for All.
- "Bomb" by Gang Green
- "Boom!" by System of a Down on the album Steal This Album!
- "Breathing" by Kate Bush, the final track off her third album, Never For Ever
- "Brighter Than a Thousand Suns" by Iron Maiden, from the album A Matter of Life and Death
- "Christmas at Ground Zero" by "Weird Al" Yankovic
- "Dancing with Tears in My Eyes" by Ultravox
- "Damnation Alley", by Hawkwind, inspired by Roger Zelazny's novel of the same name
- "Dachau Blues", by Captain Beefheart, which also touches on World War III.
- "Dead Flag Blues" by Godspeed You Black Emperor!, first track from their album F♯A♯∞
- "Destruction Preventer" by Sonata Arctica
- "Distant Early Warning" by Rush
- "De Bom" by Doe Maar
- "Domino" by Genesis, from Invisible Touch, subject of the effect of dropping the bomb
- "Dresden Blues" by Cold Chisel
- "The Earth Dies Screaming" by UB40
- "Electric Funeral" by Black Sabbath. 1970 from the Paranoid LP.
- "Epitaph" by King Crimson
- "Eve of Destruction" by Barry McGuire
- "Ever Since The World Ended", by Mose Allison
- "Everyday is Like Sunday" by Morrissey
- "Fabulous Disaster" by Exodus
- "Fight Fire with Fire" by Metallica, the first song off their second album, Ride the Lightning
- "Four minute warning" by Radiohead
- "Generals and Majors" by XTC
- "The House at Pooneil Corners" by Jefferson Airplane, from their album Crown of Creation
- "Ignorance" by Sacred Reich
- "In the Hole" by Armored Saint
- "Ink Mathematics", by Captain Beefheart
- "It's a Mistake" by Men at Work from the album Cargo
- "I Won't Let the Sun Go Down on Me" by Nik Kershaw
- "Killer of Giants" by Ozzy Osbourne
- "King of the World" by Steely Dan, from the album Countdown to Ecstasy
- "Last Sunset" (Последний Закат) by Russian metal band Aria.
- "Last Rockers" by Vice Squad
- "Like A Thousand Suns" by Heaven Shall Burn
- "Living Through Another Cuba", by XTC
- "London Calling" by The Clash
- "M.A.D." by Hadouken!. The song's lyrics and title refer to nuclear war. Indeed, the whole album has several themes and lyrics which refer to atomic war.
- "Man at C&A" by The Specials, from the album More Specials
- "Manhattan Project" by Rush, third track from their album Power Windows
- "Memories of Tomorrow" by Suicidal Tendencies
- "Morning Dew", by Bonnie Dobson; also recorded by Jeff Beck, Blackfoot, and The Grateful Dead.
- "Mutually Assured Destruction" by Gillan (band), from 1989 re-issue of their album Future Shock
- "Northern Wind" (Северный ветер) by Russian singer Linda (Линда) on the album Crow (Ворона)
- "Nuclear Annihilation" by Bolt Thrower on the album In Battle There Is No Law
- "Nuclear Attack" by Gary Moore on the album Dirty Fingers
- "Nuclear Attack" by Sabaton on the album Attero Dominatus
- "Nuclear War" by Sun Ra
- "Nuclear Winter" by Sodom
- "Oh Lord, Don't Let Them Drop That Atomic Bomb On Me", by Charles Mingus
- "One of the Living" by Tina Turner, from Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome
- "One World" by Anthrax
- "Or Shall We Die?" by Michael Berkeley
- "Part III" by Bad Religion
- "Party at Ground Zero" by Fishbone
- Pink World by Planet P Project
- "Put Down That Weapon" by Midnight Oil
- "Quite Unusual" by Front 242
- "Radioactive Toy" by Porcupine Tree
- "Reclamation" by Lamb of God
- "Rumours of War" by Billy Bragg
- "Rust in Peace...Polaris" by Megadeth, from the Rust in Peace album
- "Seconds", by U2
- "Set the World Afire" by Megadeth, from the So Far, So Good... So What! album
- "Skeletons of Society" by Slayer
- "So Long, Mom (A Song For World War III)", by Tom Lehrer
- "Stop the World" by The Clash
- "Talkin' World War III Blues", by Bob Dylan
- "Thank God For The Bomb" by Ozzy Osbourne
- "The Sun Is Burning" by Ian Campbell, performed by Simon and Garfunkel and The Dubliners
- "Survive" by Nuclear Assault
- "The Only Hope For Me Is You" by My Chemical Romance
- "Third World War" by Evil's Toy
- "This World Over", by XTC
- "Trouble", by Tonio K.
- "Twilight of the Gods", by Helloween
- "Two Minute Warning", by Depeche Mode from the 1983 album Construction Time Again
- "Two Suns in the Sunset" by Pink Floyd from the album The Final Cut
- "Two Tribes" by Frankie Goes to Hollywood
- The music video for "Untitled 1" by Sigur Rós features a world ravaged by a nuclear holocaust as its setting.
- "Warhead" by Tarot
- "War Pigs", by Black Sabbath
- "We're So Small" by The Epoxies
- "We Will All Go Together When We Go" by Tom Lehrer
- "We Will Become Silhouettes" by The Postal Service
- "When That Hell Bomb Falls*" by Fred Kirby
- "When the Wild Wind Blows" by Iron Maiden from their album The Final Frontier based on the Raymond Briggs book When the Wind Blows
- "Who's Gonna Win the War?" by Hawkwind
- "Will The Sun Rise?" by Dokken
- "Wooden Ships", recorded by both Crosby Stills & Nash and Jefferson Airplane
- "World War III" recorded by D.O.A.
- "World Wars III & IV", by Carnivore
- "WWIII" by KMFDM
- "Your Eyes Were Open" by UB40, from the album Geffrey Morgan
- "Your Attention, Please!" by Scars
- "Nuclear Suicide" by Skallbrand, from the album Welcome To The Nuclear Suicide
Games
Name | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|
2300 A.D. | 1986 | Role-playing game |
Aftermath! | 1981 | Role-playing game |
Balance of Power | 1985 | A computer strategy game of geopolitics during the Cold War |
Blast Corps | 1997 | Nintendo 64 video game |
Burntime | 1993 | A role-playing video game for DOS and Amiga |
DEFCON | 2007 | A real-time strategy game for Windows, Mac and Linux |
Fallout series | 1997 (1st)
2015 (latest) |
A post-apocalyptic role-playing video game for several platforms, early games were top down 2D while the last three are 3D, spiritual successor to Wasteland. |
Gamma World | 1978 | A post-apocalyptic role-playing game |
M.A.D. Global Thermonuclear Warfare | 2001 | PC Strategic simulation game released by Small Rockets |
Metro 2033 | 2010 | A survival horror first-person shooter set in post-apocalyptic Moscow |
Metro Last Light | 2013 | A survival horror first person shooter which is a sequel to Metro 2033 |
Missile Command | 1980 | An action video game which was wildly popular in the 1980s, widely recognized in popular culture. |
The Morrow Project | 1980 | Role-playing game |
Neocron | 2002 | A post-apocalyptic cyberpunk MMORPG for Windows |
Nuclear War | 1989 | A turn-based strategy game for Amiga and DOS |
NukeWar | 1980 | A turn-based strategy game for Apple II, Commodore 64, and other early home computer systems |
Planetarian: The Reverie of a Little Planet | 2004 | A post-apocalyptic visual novel |
Star Ocean: The Last Hope | 2009 | An action role-playing video game for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 |
Superpower 2 | 2004 | A real-time strategy wargame |
Supremacy: The Game of the Superpowers | 1984 | A board wargame |
Trinity | 1986 | An interactive fiction game examining the futile nature of nuclear war |
Trojan | 1986 | Arcade game and platformer set shortly after a nuclear war has destroyed civilization, which is now overrun by occultists who are bent on terrorizing the surviving population with psychological and biochemical warfare. |
Twilight: 2000 | 1984 | A role-playing game |
WarGames | 1984 | A video game based on the game in the hit movie |
Warzone 2100 | 1999 | An open source real-time strategy and real-time tactics hybrid computer game |
Wasteland | 1988 | A post-apocalyptic role-playing video game |
Wasteland 2 | 2014 | A post-apocalyptic role-playing video game which is a sequel to Wasteland. |
See also
- Nuclear holocaust
- Nuclear weapons in popular culture
- World War III in popular culture
- List of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction
- Apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction
- List of books about nuclear issues
- List of films about nuclear issues
- List of apocalyptic films
- List of dystopian films
References
- ↑ Mel Valentin (15 January 2010). "Book Of Eli, The (2010)". Should I See It. Retrieved 10 March 2011.
- ↑ Dark December at Fantastic Fiction
- ↑ THE ZONE Series
- ↑ The Edge of the Knife at Project Gutenberg
External links
- Nuclear Holocausts: Atomic War in Fiction, By Paul Brians, Professor of English, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington
- Annotated bibliography of nuclear literature from the Alsos Digital Library
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, April 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.