Empty World is a 1977 apocalyptic fiction novel written by John Christopher aimed at an adolescent audience. It was Christopher's eleventh such novel. It's centered around Neil Miller and his struggle to come to terms with the loss of his parents in a car crash and the subsequent Calcutta Plague that decimates the adult population. The novel is set in England in the late 1970s.

Empty World
First edition (UK)
AuthorJohn Christopher
Cover artistCraig Dodd
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
GenrePost-apocalyptic
PublisherHamish Hamilton (UK)
E. P. Dutton (US)
Publication date
29 September 1977 (UK)
20 March 1978 (US)
Media typehardcover
paperback
Pages134
ISBN0-241-89751-3 (UK)
0-525-29250-0 (US)

Plot edit

15-year-old Neil Miller's world explodes when he and his family are involved in a car accident that kills his parents. Sent to live with his grandparents in a small village named Winchelsea, England, Neil suffers from post traumatic stress. Soon, a devastating illness, called the Calcutta Plague, makes headlines, killing thousands of people in India in a matter of months. The virus begins spreading across the world, making its way to the small village where Neil lives. It is a strange illness as it only affects the adults and none of the children, and once again Neil finds himself an orphan after his grandparents succumb to the disease.

Neil attempts to care for two younger children also orphaned by the plague, but they also contract the virus and die as he tries to care for them. During this time Neil notes that he has contracted the plague, but after a brief fever it leaves him unaffected. Now the sole survivor in Winchelsea and deciding that the village is becoming dangerous -- packs of feral dogs roaming everywhere -- he leaves for London, taking first a manual Mini which he has difficulty driving, followed by an automatic Jaguar.

Arriving in London he meets his first fellow survivor - the mentally unbalanced Clive, who although friendly towards Neil, during the night vandalizes his car to the point of destroying it, steals his mother's ring that Neil had kept, which was the only memory of his mother he had, and then abandons him in central London.

Soon after he finds two girls, Lucy and Billie, creating an unstable threesome. Attracted to Neil, Lucy begins pulling away from Billie, and in her fear of loneliness and out of desperation Billie attempts to kill Neil when they are on a foraging expedition. She stabs him in the back. Neil discovers she has emptied his gun but he manages to overpower Billie and escapes back to Lucy.

Billie arrives back at the house and pleads with both Lucy and Neil to let her back in, but they decide that they could never trust her again, and leave her outside. In the last paragraph of the book Neil abruptly changes his mind, feeling that he would never get over the guilt of leaving Billie to die, and with Lucy goes downstairs to open the door and let her back inside.

Background edit

John Christopher said the inspiration for Empty World came from "the recollection of a childish daydream".[1] He suspected it was a fantasy shared by most children: a world without adults and the restrictions they place on children. He thought it would be fun if it was just him and a few friends left to do as they pleased, with everything at their disposal. He felt that it was a grim daydream and that Empty World was an exploration of that daydream. For him, personally, he was analyzing the "people-need-people cliche".[1]

Reviews edit

Empty World over the years has been well received. The characters and the loneliness of the Neil's journey is well developed, and the English setting of the novel will not discourage American readers, especially children as it is "not too English".[2] Well written, and more believable than one would think just by reading a summary, it is a page turner. John Christopher offers a chilly story, which offers more, and is by and large more convincing the trope, put in play by many television series of happy survivors seeking a place to establish a cleaner and more romantic version of the old world. Empty World gives the youthful reader far more to think about by exploring darker and more realistic themes of greed, mistrust, despair, and insanities.[3] Empty World has been compared to novels like Secret City, U.S.A., by Felice Holman and When the City Stopped, by Joan Phipson.[4]

TV Adaptations edit

The German station ZDF produced a TV adaptation of Empty World in 1987.[5]

Movie Adaptations edit

A movie version of Empty World was said to be in production in 2011 but no further information is available . [1]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Gough, John (June 1984). "An interview with John Christopher". Children's Literature in Education. 15 (2): 93–102. doi:10.1007/bf01151774. ISSN 0045-6713. S2CID 162308735.
  2. ^ Klein, Pnina S.; Schwartz, Allen A. (December 1979). "Effects of Training Auditory Sequential Memory and Attention On Reading'". The Journal of Special Education. 13 (4): 365–374. doi:10.1177/002246697901300404. ISSN 0022-4669. S2CID 145062956.
  3. ^ Sterck, Kenneth (1983). "3. Science fiction". Children's Literature in Education. 14 (4): 222–236. doi:10.1007/bf01127283. ISSN 0045-6713. S2CID 144655358.
  4. ^ Harris, Marla (2002). "Bleak Houses and Secret Cities: Alternative Communities in Young Adult Fiction". Children's Literature in Education. 33 (1): 63–76. doi:10.1023/a:1014419810075. ISSN 0045-6713. S2CID 142521724.
  5. ^ Kloss, Albert (1987), "Die Überwindung der Angst vor der Leere", Von der Electricität zur Elektrizität, Basel: Birkhäuser Basel, pp. 11–22, doi:10.1007/978-3-0348-6037-6_1, ISBN 978-3-0348-6038-3, retrieved 28 April 2021

External links edit