Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Long Tomorrow
The Long Tomorrow | Leigh Brackett
10 posts | 11 read | 11 to read
'No city, no town, no community of more than one thousand people or two hundred buildings to the square mile, shall be built or permitted to exist anywhere in the United States of America.' Thirtieth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States Two generations after the nuclear holocaust, rumours persisted about a secret desert hideaway where scientists worked with dangerous machines and where men plotted to revive the cities. Almost a continent away, Len Coulter heard whisperings that fired his imagination. Then one day he found a strange wooden box ...
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
BestDogDad
The Long Tomorrow | Leigh Brackett
post image
Pickpick


This was a good classic post-apocalyptic novel, but not one of my favorites from the 1950s. I thought the writing was great but I just couldn't understand the motivations of the main characters at times. I would still recommend this despite some of my frustrations with it.

15 likes1 stack add
review
Settings
The Long Tomorrow | Leigh Brackett
post image
Pickpick

Nominated for the 1956 Hugo Awards. Not a new read for me, but I want to do a review.

Coming-of-age story during a tech-adversion apocalyptic scenario with a main character who is enchanted with technology.

Does not proceed entirely in the direction you'd expect. Great ending.

#SFFawardnoms

review
Bookwomble
The Long Tomorrow | Leigh Brackett
post image
Pickpick

As the story takes place less than 100 years after the nuclear apocalypse, I have the feeling that the long tomorrow of the title is what happens after the story ends, and that Len Coulter's coming-of-age is the template for a development that will be writ large across the future history. So, a cautiously optimistic view of things, recognising the fragility upon which that hope is founded. A nice balance between character and plot. 4/5🌟

10 likes1 stack add
quote
Bookwomble
The Long Tomorrow | Leigh Brackett
post image

Birthing takes nine months, and dying takes you all the rest of your life.

blurb
Bookwomble
The Long Tomorrow | Leigh Brackett
post image

Two opposing world views justifying their position and vilifying each other by appeals to the same god, the same scripture, the same excuses. Only, it's the *other* side who are dangerous fanatics... Even a nuclear apocalypse can't change some things.

quote
Bookwomble
The Long Tomorrow | Leigh Brackett
post image

The cities were sucking all the life of the country into themselves and destroying it. Men were no longer individuals but units in a vast machine, all cut to one pattern, with the same tastes and ideas, the same mass-produced education that did not educate but only pasted a veneer of catchwords over ignorance.

10 likes1 stack add
quote
Bookwomble
The Long Tomorrow | Leigh Brackett
post image

"There were fires in the sky, red fires. They were cities burning."

This put me in mind of "Red Skies Over Paradise" by British new wave band, Fischer-Z (pronounced the British way, as a pun on 'fish's head'). It's an album full of '80s nuclear angst, and polemics against multinational capitalism, fascist oppression, suicide and urban alienation. Despite which, it's somehow quite uplifting! #booksandmusic #postapocalypse

Trashcanman "We learn dances, brand new dances, like the nuclear bomb" 7y
Bookwomble @Trashcanman Love a bit of Iggy 😊 7y
Trashcanman I have to tell you I really like the style of books you read. There are many sweet and lovely people here but not many that read things that interest me. 7y
See All 6 Comments
Bookwomble @Trashcanman Is it because I'm sour and grotesque? 😬😱😂 7y
Trashcanman @Bookwomble are you telling me we're related? 7y
Bookwomble @Trashcanman Ha, ha! Could be 😉 7y
13 likes6 comments
quote
Bookwomble
The Long Tomorrow | Leigh Brackett
post image

As long as there are crazed or crafty leaders to play on old fears, a mob will turn cruel.

blurb
Bookwomble
The Long Tomorrow | Leigh Brackett
post image

I love reading a book that was printed before I was born! In "old money", this one cost 3 shillings and six pence, or 17-1/2 new pence after decimalisation in 1971.
Anyway, as it turns out, this isn't set very far into the future, as I'd initially thought, but it is a post-apocalyptic story, another genre I enjoy. I can almost hear Charlton Heston's anguished cry, "You Maniacs! You blew it up! Ah, damn you! God damn you all to hell!"

saresmoore Old money, new money, the Euro. I think I‘d need to read a primer to understand it all. U.S. money is very straightforward—it‘s all made up and gold doesn‘t matter. 😬 7y
Bookwomble Pre-1971, UK currency was 4 farthings = 1 penny, 12 pence = 1 shilling, 20 shillings = 1 pound. After decimalisation, things were simplified to 100 pennies = 1 pound. I was a child during the transition, but can remember the difficulties my Nanna had in adjusting. And, yup, it's all made up nonsense 😊 7y
13 likes2 comments
blurb
Bookwomble
The Long Tomorrow | Leigh Brackett
post image

With shelf space at a premium, I've made an effort to start pulling out those of my TBRs that just possibly-maybe I might-perhaps let go of once I've read them. Only done part of my sci-fi and fantasy shelves so far and these are what I've pulled. Simply because it ended up on top, I'm going to start with Leigh Brackett. I do love a far-future history, though, so she might be saved in the end! This is such a bloody hard task! 😫