I was eight years old in the fall of 1959. We lived in the southwest Denver suburbs and my father worked at the Martin-Marietta plant further south. Rocky Flats Nuclear Weapons plant was seven miles to the northwest. Further north were swarms of missile silos in northern Colorado, southeast Wyoming, and eastern Nebraska. During the school year, we participated in duck-and-cover drills at our neighborhood school. Nukes were a fact of life. The Cold War was in its prime.
1959-1960 is the setting for
Pat Frank's novel, "Alas, Babylon." The title (I read the 1993 HarperCollins
trade paperback edition) is taken from scripture, the origin of so many book
titles for classic novels. This from Revelation 18:10 in the King James Bible:
Standing afar off for the fear of her torment, saying, Alas, alas, that great city Babylon, that mighty city! for in one hour is thy judgment come.
Randy Bragg and his brother
Mark grew up in the hamlet of Fort Repose, Florida. Randy served in the Korean
War and went home to live the life of a bachelor attorney. Mark went into the
Air Force and was a colonel in the Strategic Air Command in Omaha. He and Randy
shared a code, “Alas, Babylon,” if it looked as if World War III was about to
break out. One day, Randy gets the code from his brother who sends his wife and
kids to Fort Repose because it will be safer than Nebraska’s Ground Zero.
Fort Repose was like so many
1950s Central Florida small towns. Its history included Native Americans,
Spanish conquistadors, Confederate troops, and rednecks. It’s sleepy, hot and
humid for half the year, site of Florida natives and a smattering of Yankee
retirees known as snowbirds. African-Americans were called Negroes and some
unflattering names by the ruling Whites. The living was easy but also separate
and unequal. Disney existed only on TV and the movies.
Bam! As Randy Newman wrote much
later in his song, "Political Science:"
Let's drop The Big One, and see what happens
And then:
Boom goes London, boom Paree/More room for you, and more room for me/And every city, the whole world 'round/Will be just another American Town.
Newman's satiric take is closer to my Strangelove-style attitude of "WTF were we thinking?"
Fort Repose is just another
American town surrounded by important Russki targets in Tampa, Orlando,
Jacksonville, and Miami. Boom goes Tampa and boom Miami. Nobody really knows
how it started but survivors have much to deal with.
That's the great thing about
Frank's novel -- he writes in detail about the daily struggles of a small town
beleaguered by a Cold War turned hot. Randy is the only Army Reserve
officer in town so he assumes command. He’s a good officer, mainly, although he
does boss people around a bit. He also organizes a vigilante squad to go after “highwaymen,”
nogoodniks who have beaten and murdered people in the town. They even hang one
as a lesson to all.
The book is about survival,
post-apocalyptic-style. It made me wonder how I would survive. I have no skills
to speak of. Randy is a shade-tree mechanic, hunter, and fisherman. His cohorts
in the town know which end of the rifle to point at deer and the occasional
ruffian. They knows how to catch fish and crabs, where to find salt, which
plants are edible. There’s a doctor in town and a retired admiral with his own
fleet of small boats. There’s a love interest. And the ending is sort of happy.
As I read, I had to put aside
my 2023 aesthetics. The Whites treat the Blacks as second-class citizens except
when they need their automotive or farming skills. The attitude is not much
different from characters found in Flannery O’Connor stories and William
Faulkner novels. They were born into it and acted accordingly. Our family moved
to Central Florida in 1964 and attitudes hadn’t changed much. My father worked
on rockets at the Cape where before he had worked on the kind of missiles that
rained down on the Reds in “Alas, Babylon.” Our integrated high school
basketball team got into many scrapes when we ventured outside our beachside
tourist town to play teams in the hinterlands. Places like Fort Repose.
If I was reviewing this book
now, I’d call some of the language and attitudes archaic even racist. The book
itself is solid. Frank knows how to tell a story and he did his research, not
surprising when you learn a bit about his background. He was a Florida writer,
too, living in a place like Fort Repose. He asked the question: what would my
neighbors do if the Big One dropped? The author delivered. I read a book about
nuclear war set and written in 1959, 63 years ago, a book I had never heard of.
My sister Eileen sent me her copy which she already read. Not surprisingly, the
cover features a bright red mushroom cloud.
Let’s drop The Big One now!
2 comments:
I too remember the "duck-and-cover" drills in grade school in the early 60's. Also remember getting a few vaccine shots at school. And did I see that Repose, FL is based on Mt. Dora?
Bob
I heard that Mount Dora was the setting for Fort Repose. I've been through there but not lately.
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