The Purple Cloud (Frontiers of Imagination)
by:
John Clute (author)
M.P. Shiel (author)
If now a swell from the Deep has swept over this planetary ship of earth, and I, who alone chanced to find myself in the furthest stern, as the sole survivor of her crew . . . What then, my God, shall I do?The Purple Cloud is widely hailed as a masterpiece of science fiction and one of the best...
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If now a swell from the Deep has swept over this planetary ship of earth, and I, who alone chanced to find myself in the furthest stern, as the sole survivor of her crew . . . What then, my God, shall I do?The Purple Cloud is widely hailed as a masterpiece of science fiction and one of the best "last man" novels ever written. A deadly purple vapor passes over the world and annihilates all living creatures except one man, Adam Jeffson. He embarks on an epic journey across a silent and devastated planet, an apocalyptic Robinson Crusoe putting together the semblance of a normal life from the flotsam and jetsam of his former existence. As he descends into madness over the years, he becomes increasingly aware that his survival was no accident and that his destiny—and the fate of the human race—are part of a profound, cosmological plan.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780803292796 (0803292791)
Publish date: September 1st 2000
Publisher: Bison Books
Pages no: 296
Edition language: English
ChronologyIntroductionFurther ReadingNote on the Text--The Purple CloudNotes
I just watched the film, "The World, The Flesh & The Devil" (1959) which is based on this book. Then I read that HP Lovecraft loved this novel. Now I HAVE to read it!
Immediately upon finishing The Purple Cloud I had to reread H.P. Lovecraft's novella "At the Mountains of Madness." Both stories deal with forbidden polar expeditions and world-shattering revelations. Where Lovecraft's story revealed a past and a cosmos where humans hardly signified, Shiel's is a re...
This book is amazingly entertaining and, by coincidence, extremely topical. I wonder why it never became that popular worldwide. Perhaps it will soon.Just think about the trouble we're currently having with that Icelandic vulcano, the tongue-twister Eyjafjallajokull.What if those spiteful ashes were...
The discussion this morning around Day of the Triffids reminded me of this obscure and extremely bizarre novel, which I must have read when I was about ten or eleven. The Wikipedia article is excellent - I had quite forgotten most of the outrageous plot, which starts when God wipes out all human bei...