‘A’ is for ‘Apocalypses.’ The fiction of The House That Nobody Built and The
Last House in the Sky is unique in that it’s a Post-Post-Post-Post-Apocalyptic world.
The citizens have had to handle giant meteors, and then an enormous flood, and then the zombie uprising,
and then the dinosaurs coming back. Let me tell you: zombies get passé after a
t-rex eats your dad.
No one knows if there's a common reason or cause to the catastrophes. We know they happen every 200-300 years, with exact chronology being difficult to chart what with meteors and hungry robots consuming all the charts every 200-300 years. But everyone more or less acknowledges that the first really good apocalypse was The Apocalypse of Sauropods, when dinosaurs decided to roam the land again. They’d been extinct for so long that they were considered myths. Fans of mythology were very upset with the unexpected feathering. Everyone else was upset that they were being trampled to death. The diseases they carried with them alone overturned entire biomes.
No one knows if there's a common reason or cause to the catastrophes. We know they happen every 200-300 years, with exact chronology being difficult to chart what with meteors and hungry robots consuming all the charts every 200-300 years. But everyone more or less acknowledges that the first really good apocalypse was The Apocalypse of Sauropods, when dinosaurs decided to roam the land again. They’d been extinct for so long that they were considered myths. Fans of mythology were very upset with the unexpected feathering. Everyone else was upset that they were being trampled to death. The diseases they carried with them alone overturned entire biomes.
About 250 years into their reign, the gremlins launched cities
into the sky. This put them out of biting range, and with their manipulation of
lightning and mechanics, into very good conquering range. They were so
technologically advanced that they turned all the (literally) lower cultures
into reality television and entertainment. Their obliteration of lower people
for amusement was viewed by others as the Apocalypse of Gremlins. In under 300 years
they mastered alternative energy, levitation and prosthetic bodies, and began
to unlock the secrets of artificial intelligence and inter-dimensional travel.
Very good until the artificial intelligence turned on them. That was the
Apocalypse of Automatons, which crashed all the flying cities, and set robots
roving the landscape to consume all biological life forms. As far as we know,
gremlins went extinct, and technology has stalled out at the “push broom” level
ever since.
The automatons didn’t have a real empire, but rather, more
of a buffet. They were the new apex predators, able to prey upon sauropods,
gryphons and manticores, forcing sentient life into smaller groups,
underground, or to the fringes of the west and the icy south. Automatons became
so dominant that, naturally, 200 years later, they were the victims of an
apocalypse. The Apocalypse of the Shock was a freak lightning storm an entire continent
wide, which fried over 95% of all automatons. Evolution kicked in a few bucks
and taught the t-rex to hunt robots.
In the previous period of largely underground civilizations,
the imps grew in political and magical power. Previously a species gremlins
bred as pets, imps possessed keen intellect and inclination for elemental
manipulation. With the automatons out of the way, the former inbred slaves
created their own proper empire, consuming much of the west, and enslaving
triclopes and humans for their labor. Rather than technology, they studied the
primal forces of the world, believing their demonic ancestors were a better
route to power. Within 230 years, they opened a rift into what theologians
might call “Hell,” in order to summon those ancestors. Those ancestors promptly
set the planet on fire in what non-theologians refer to as “The Apocalypse of
Demons.”
It was a great war that required all species to band
together and fight off the fiery tyrants. Never in recorded history had there
been such a moment of pan-culturalism. And then the moment past, and since more
humans were alive than any other species, they declared their own empire,
swearing to get it right this time. We’ll find out about them at ‘E’.
We still don’t know if there’s a singular reason or pattern
to the apocalypses. We only know that oral traditions have them running back to
the beginning of time – presuming that the beginning of time was an apocalypse
that savaged nothingness. Upon inventing the telescope, many gremlins lapsed
into hopeless nihilism upon discovering apocalypses had apparently already
blown up every other planet out there.
Not sure it would be the most plesant place to live, but it sure is entertaining to read about. Love it.
ReplyDeleteRinelle Grey
I might dedicate a day to the safer vacation spots, should you like to visit. They're clever out there on the archipelago.
DeleteFun, fun stuff.... looking forward to reading it!
ReplyDeleteI'm gonna have to read these books now... I mean, seriously- it's like Jurassic park meets a mash-up of gremlin movies meets Terminator meets a mash-up of disaster movies meets a mash-up of demonic tales (possibly including evil dead?). It's like an OD of awesome things!
ReplyDeleteHere's hoping I find the right publisher this year. I'd love to work on these babies full-time. The world and characters keep giving me more material. Thank you, Bev!
DeleteIs D gonna be for Dystopia? Just wondering. :D
ReplyDeleteYour fellow A-Z challenger,
Deecoded
I was considering it, given how many reigns could be considered parodies of Dystopia, but Thursday is destined to be a little more political than that.
DeleteYou've definitely piqued my interest in both of your books. I can't wait to see what you share with the rest of the alphabet.
ReplyDeleteIt seems like everything is cyclical - fashion, weather, my weight - so why not apocalypses?
It's all coming around, Chuck. Even our planet has seen a few apocalypses. The introduction of oxygen, anyone?
DeleteI loved the theme of your post - Apocalypses. As a fan of Buffy I was used to accepting that apocalyptic situations occurred on a weekly basis, I can easily believe they could come around quite frequently ;)
ReplyDeleteThat's the one thing my world needs to set everything straight: a cheerleader!
DeleteThat was an interesting read. I will have to come back and check your other posts now.
ReplyDeleteThis post really got my imagination going, love it!
ReplyDeleteAlso, I think you're blog design is fine.If it's bright white on a black background that's the worst, but your text isn't too light and your background isn't too dark. You've done well :)
Very relieving to read, J.A.! Thank you for the stamp of approval on the color scheme.
DeleteExcellent start to the Challenge, I am looking forward to more. Good luck.
ReplyDeleteDeena of E-BookBuilders
All the layers of previous apocalypses, threading together in a coherent present... must be quite a place!
ReplyDeleteHa ha! this is great! Can't wait to read more. :-)
ReplyDeleteBrilliant - though I can't get an image of zombie T-rex out of my head. It is more firmly entrenched there than any mind-worm.
ReplyDeleteIt won't be a vampire t-rex, but something close to that will show up later this month. I cross my heart.
DeleteI hope we're not seeing 'end of times' for awhile yet. I think we're just fascinated with the prospect, that's all.
ReplyDeleteGlad to meet you and look forward to seeing more of your posts.
Kathy at Oak Lawn Images
T-Rexes, robots, imps, sounds like a story I'd like to read. Howdy from A to Z and new follower :)
ReplyDeleteWhat a great start of the challenge!
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting my blog today. Good luck with A to Z!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the Apocolypsorama! It would have been nicer if I'd had some chocolates and a latte. ;)
ReplyDeleteOh no! Bacteria is next. I'm shaking now.
ReplyDeleteI love how this is presented almost as an encyclopedia entry, yet manages to fly off into the stratosphere anyhow.
ReplyDelete