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And isn't it true? The end of humanity won't mean the end of Earth. In
this book I am about to review, "Earth Abides", the end of humanity is a very
possible thing. This book, written by George R. Stewart, was meant to be a prediction of what could possibly happen to the human race. In fact, Stewart
refused to be given an award for it in Science Fiction because, according to
him, it wasn't sci-fi... it could really happen. And, quite frankly, I agree.
In the beginning of the book, a guy named Ish is bitten by a rattlesnake up in
the mountains. He gets to his cabin, uses his snake-bite kit, and lies down. A
little later on, two guys walk into his cabin. He calls out to them, saying that
he is sick, asking for help, and... they run away!
The next morning, he goes down to a town... and there is nobody there! The town
is completely silent; the only living thing is a dog running in the middle of the
street. So, Ish breaks in through a store window, and grabs a newspaper,
thinking, "What am I anyway? Rip van Winkle?" Even so, Rip van Winkle, though
he had slept for twenty years, had come back to a village that was still full of
people. But, as he reads the newspaper, he learns that something much worse
had happened. While he was up in his cabin in the mountains, a mysterious
illness had swept the world. No cure could be found. Almost every human on the
face of the earth was now dead! Well, now we know why the men ran away from him when he
said he was sick!
So, he sets off, heading for California, looking for other survivors like
himself. On his way, he runs into few people, but even fewer decide to go with
him....
In the end, he, along with a small group people, end up living in California
and having kids, with hopes that someday the human race will rise up again. The kids
know nothing of the time before the disease struck the earth....
And, you will know nothing of the rest of this book unless you read it yourself!
-mimiru
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