Without Warning (Birmingham novel)

Without Warning is an alternate history novel written by Australian author John Birmingham, released in Australia in September 2008 and in the United States and the United Kingdom in February 2009.[1] It is the first book in a new stand-alone universe. The novels After America and Angels of Vengeance continue the story.[2]

Without Warning
AuthorJohn Birmingham
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
SeriesDisappearance Series
GenreAlternate history, Techno-thriller novel
PublisherPan MacMillan
Publication date
September 2008
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
ISBN978-0-345-50289-6
Followed byAfter America 

Plot

On the eve of the Iraq War, March 14, 2003, the majority of the population of the contiguous United States (along with the bulk of the populations of Canada, Mexico, and Cuba) disappears as the result of a large energy field that later comes to be known as "The Wave". Without Warning deals with the international consequences of the disappearance of the world's last superpower on the eve of war.

Development

Birmingham said he was inspired to write the novel after hearing someone during a student demonstration at the University of Queensland say the world would be a better place if the United States disappeared.[1]

References to other works

Without Warning contains a large number of references to popular culture. Birmingham, the author, said that he did this as a nod to American novelist Stephen King:

When I was a kid and started reading big, fat books, the thing that struck me about his novels, so different to the dull, dull things they made us read at school, was they were full of real world references.[1]

Reception

Literary significance

Jim Hopper of the San Diego Union-Tribune said Without Warning is an example of "'mainstream' genres (thrillers particularly) [that] incorporate some SFnal elements pretty often as greater or lesser plot element."[3]

gollark: It's very high-bandwidth and fast so it's useful to the GPU, though.
gollark: It is technically possible, but no.
gollark: At this point, books, movies, images and anything else you can put on a computer is (sort of) just an extremely large number.
gollark: Lots of things are just numbers. Some numbers are useful.
gollark: It would be useful if they provided actual real-word TDP numbers, because then laptops maybe wouldn't have quite the same thermal/power issues.

References

  1. Blundell, Graeme (2008-10-18). "On lowbrow street". The Australian. Retrieved 10 November 2008.
  2. "MCC-Longview 2008 Literary Festival". Metropolitan Community College. 2008. Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 19 November 2008.
  3. Moench, David (22 April 2009). "The Future of Newspapers and Book Coverage: A Book Reviewer Roundtable". Unbound Worlds. Penguin Random House. Retrieved 2009-04-27.


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