The
Last Man on Earth is an anthology featuring post-apocalyptic
stories. It was published as a paperback original by Fawcett Crest in 1982, which is
the very edition that caught my eye. The artwork perfectly captures the theme
of the stories – a solitary man, a backpack on his shoulders sitting atop a
dune with a skull and dead bird below. The artist: W. C. Barlowe.
The opening paragraph (from the story “The Underdweller”
by William F. Nolan):
“In
the waiting, windless dark, Lewis Stillman pressed into the building-front
shadows along Wilshire Boulevard. Breathing softly, the automatic poised and
ready in his hand, he advanced with animal stealth toward Western Avenue,
gliding over the night-cool concrete past ravaged clothing shops, drug and ten-cent
stores, their windows shattered, their doors ajar and swinging. The city of Los
Angeles, painted in cold moonlight, was an immense graveyard; the tall, white tombstone
buildings thrust up from the silent pavement, shadow-carved and lonely.
Overturned corpses of trucks, buses, and automobiles littered the streets.”
This anthology was edited by Isaac Asimov, Martin
Harry Greenberg, and Charles G. Waugh. It features 17 reprinted stories by such
science fiction luminaries as William F. Nolan, Poul Anderson, Clifford D.
Simak, Frederic Brown, Roger Zelazny, A. E. Van Vogt, and many others.
This anthology is one of the seminal works in my
adoration of both classic science fiction and short fiction. It introduced me
to the work of Edmond Hamilton, A. E. Van Vogt, Frederic Brown, and the short
work of William F. Nolan. It, beyond the nicely executed cover art, is very
much worth having on your bookshelf.
4 comments:
Thanks -- looks like a collection I'd like and a list of authors I know I already do...will track down a copy.
You won't regret it, Ron. The Last Man on Earth is one of my favorite anthologies, regardless of genre.
Ben, I'm attracted by the cover and the list of distinguished writers. I tend to read sf anthologies as opposed to sf novels, perhaps because I have so many authors to read.
Prashant, I also seem to read more SF short stories than novels and I seem to enjoy the SF written between the 1950s and 1990s better than the newer SF. Probably because it tended to be shorter than much of what is being published today. Maybe.
Post a Comment