Thomas Merton, Peacemaker: Meditations on Merton, Peacemaking and the Spiritual Life
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A noted peacemaker reflects on Thomas Merton's lessons for peacemaking today. In this centenary year...
China Threat?: The Challenges, Myths and Realities of China's Rise
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From the long-term threat of nuclear war between the United States and China, to the disappearance...
SIPRI Yearbook 2015: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
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The SIPRI Yearbook is known worldwide as an authoritative and independent source of data and...
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century
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In 1987, NASA astronaut William "Buck" Rogers is caught in a freak accident in deep space, causing...
American Cinema of the 1950s: Themes and Variations
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America in the 1950s was a place of sensational commercial possibility coupled with dark nuclear...
World Conqueror 4
Games
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World Conqueror 4 is the newest-released game by EASYTECH in 2017. We will continue to develop...
Cold War Kitchen: Americanization, Technology, and European Users
Ruth Oldenziel and Karin Zachmann
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Richard Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev's famous "kitchen debate" in 1958 involved more than the virtues...
In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer
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At the end of World War II, J. Robert Oppenheimer was one of America's preeminent physicists. For...
Set in present day, it follows Jon Keller, an American Historian, and his fellow guests at a hotel in Switzerland, following a nuclear war. Pretty much every major city in the world has been bombed. The majority of guests have left, trying to get back to their homes even thought the media has advised them against doing so (no aeroplanes, no public transport). Jon and a small group of other guests decide to stay and make the best of it.
Whilst checking water supplies in the roof storage tanks, they find the body of a child, and Jon decides to investigate.
The book is written in Jon's voice as he writes a diary, a history, of his and the other guests survival, and his investigation.
I really liked this. It wasn't sensationalised, it all seemed so reasonable, and in our current worldwide political climate, so plausible - which is what made it really scary. It did have a bit of the "Huis Clos" (a play by Jean Paul Sartre) feeling about it: a feeling of being trapped with the same day coming around again and again, no escape, stuck with the same people that you neither particularly like or trust. And I liked that about it.
By the way, in the advent of a nuclear holocaust, Switzerland would seem to be a pretty civilised place to be 'stuck'.
Many thanks to NetGalley and Viking for the copy of this book to read and review!
Under Pressure
Book
Imagine a world without natural light, where you can barely stand up straight for fear of knocking...