After London, or Wild England

During the Pandemic, I oddly began reading dystopian and post-apocalyptic fiction. I recently ran across Richard Jefferies’ 1885 novel After London which likely is one of the first post-apocalypse English language novels. The tale is set in a future England after an unspecified catastrophe has destroyed civilization, cut off communication with the continent, and set the surviving human population back to a quasi-medieval existence among the overgrown ruins of the “ancients.” The nature of the disaster is never explained, but it must have been significant — the interior of the island is now filled with an immense freshwater lake, and London is now choked under poisonous fumes.

The first section, called “The Relapse Into Barbarism,” reads like a nonfiction natural history, describing in detail how nature reclaims the ruins in the decades after the conflagration. The longer second section, “Wild England,” recounts the adventures of the young nobleman Felix Aquila as he leaves the stultifying court life in which he has been raised and rows out onto the lake in a homemade canoe.

 

The full text is available at Project Gutenberg and on Google Books, and there’s a free audio version at Librivox. (see below)

 

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1 Response to After London, or Wild England

  1. Adding to my list of classic scifi to read, thanks!

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