Skip to content
Answering Your Questions About Reactor: Right here.
Sign up for our weekly newsletter. Everything in one handy email.
When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

Reactor

It seems that some writers set up dystopian environments with the express aim of fixing them by the end of the book (or series). This is particularly true of YA dystopian fiction, the category in which my Steeplejack series most obviously fits, but I’m particularly interested in how such dystopias come about and how the characters in those stories survive, using the means at their disposal to resist the status quo.

 

The Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret Atwood (1985)

This is one of several books I could have put on this list which seem especially—even painfully—topical right now and have gotten a lot of attention in the last year or so (Orwell’s 1984 and Animal Farm being other obvious possibilities), and not merely because of the new TV adaptation. The focus is, of course, on gender, the Republic of Gilead (once the United States) having stripped women of the most basic rights (including the right to read). While it may seem unlikely that a civilized country could take such a retrograde step, the circumstances which create this culture in the book—the rise of a Christian fundamentalist movement which asserts its ruthless influence after an attack kills the President and most of Congress—are unsettlingly plausible.

 

The Machine Stops E.M. Forster (1909)

A novella (at most) which—with staggering prescience—looks forward to a version of earth in which people are isolated, every aspect of their lives mediated by a central “machine” whose operations are viewed with almost religious awe. The story centers on the machine’s gradual apocalyptic failing and the people’s inability to either repair it (all technical know how having being lost) or to live without it. It’s a bleak indictment of a culture so obsessed with labor saving technology that they lose touch with their own bodies and any meaningful notion of mental independence.

 

The Day of the Triffids, John Wyndham (1951)

The nightmare premise of this book is that, after a night in which a dazzling meteor shower (which may actually be orbiting weapons) leaves most of the British population blind and therefore at the mercy of the triffids: giant, mobile, venomous and carnivorous plants produced by genetic manipulation. What follows is the chaos of trying to survive not just the triffids, but the humans (individual and governmental) which are attempting to exploit the situation to their own ends.

 

Riddley Walker, Russell Hoban (1980)

Set in southern England a couple of thousand years after a nuclear holocaust, this remarkable book depicts not just the lives of the survivors but their garbled cultural memories, much of which is rendered in the very words they use. The people hold on to the vestigial traces of things their society once valued, the meaning of which has long since been lost. Against this strange and shadowy second Dark Age, the title character (in a quest reminiscent of an old Star Trekepisode!) seeks to relearn the lost art of making gun powder.

 

Gulliver’s Travels, Jonathan Swift (1726)

A slightly perverse addition to the list, but a neat one because it identifies part of what makes the subgenre so powerful. As is well known, Gulliver travels from place to fabulous place, encountering various outlandish, comic and troubling cultures. Invariably, of course, Swift’s satire is directed not so much at the foreign places as at Gulliver himself, who—in addition to being gullible—frequently derives the wrong lesson from what he experiences. The final visit, in which he is shipwrecked in the land of the horse-like Hounhynyms which are plagued by the clearly and barbarically human Yahoos, turns him into a tortured misanthrope incapable of spending time with people. The book is, like many dystopian novels, finally a searing critique of the way humanity’s stupidity and selfishness is allowed to dictate the terms under which everyone lives and, of course, dies.

 

Part of what separates great dystopian novels from the rest is the sense that the messed up world presented is plausible, a credible extension of real world social problems. With the less convincing sort I find myself wondering how on earth a society could ever actually evolve in the way represented by the book. The world feels fictional because it’s clearly an artificial problem the author has invented in order for the plucky hero to fix it. When the dystopia does get fixed, the resulting world often looks uncannily like the one in which the reader actually lives. I’m more interested in dystopias that ring true because we can see them looming in some nightmare version of our own future. They stand not just as fictional environments in which our heroes can be brave, but cautionary tales about what might happen if we aren’t.

Top image: Earle Bergey cover art for The Day of the Triffids, Popular Library Edition (March, 1952)

A.J. Hartley is the bestselling author of a dozen novels including Sekret Machines: Chasing Shadows (co-authored with Tom DeLonge) and the YA fantasy adventure Steeplejack and its sequel Firebrand (available from Tor Teen). As Andrew James Hartley, he is also UNC Charlotte’s Robinson Distinguished Professor of Shakespeare, specializing in performance theory and practice, and is the author of various scholarly books and articles from the world’s best academic publishers including Palgrave and Cambridge University Press. He is an honorary fellow of the University of Central Lancashire, UK.

 

About the Author

About Author Mobile

A.J. Hartley

Author

Learn More About A.J.
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
7 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments