ebooks     ebooks
ebooks ebooks ebooks
ebooks
free titles new titles top stories register home support wish list view cart my bookshelf
ebooks
 
Advanced Search
ebooks ebooks
Buywise Club
Gift Certificates
eBook Big Bargains
ebooks
Fiction
 Alternate History
 Children
 Classic Literature
 Dark Fantasy
 Erotica
 Fantasy
 Historical Fiction
 Horror
 Humor
 Mainstream
 Mystery/Crime
 Romance
 Science Fiction
 Star Trek
 Suspense/Thriller
 Young Adult
ebooks
Nonfiction
 Business
 Children
 Education
 Family/Relationships
 General
 Health/Fitness
 History
 People
 Personal Finance
 Politics/Government
 Reference
 Self Improvement
 Spiritual/Religion
 Sports/Entertainm't
 Technology/Science
 Travel
 True Crime
ebooks
Formats
 AudioBooks
 MultiFormat
 Gemstar/Rocket
 Secure Adobe Reader
 Secure Mobipocket
 Secure MS Reader
 Secure eReaderebooks
Browse
 Authors
 Award-Winners
 Bestsellers
 Free eBooks
 eMagazines
 New eBooks 
 Publishers
 Recommendations
 Series List
 Short Stories
 Under a Dollar
ebooks
Miscellany
 About Us
 Author Info
 Fictionwise Gear
 Help/FAQs
 Library
 Links
 Money Savers
 Newsgroup
 Publisher Info
 Tell a Friend
  ebooks

HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99% of hacker crime.

Click on image to enlarge.

Journals of the Plague Years [MultiFormat]
eBook by Norman Spinrad

  Regular     Club
List Price:  $2.85     $2.42
You Pay:  $1.99     $1.69
You Save:  30.18%     40.7%

eBook Category: Science Fiction
eBook Description: I wanted, most passionately, to write a novel about not only the future of an America under the cloud of the AIDS epidemic and what it would do to a generation living in a world where death and sex were intimately entwined. Not only that, but with a scientifically plausible means of bringing such a terrible era to a happy ending. This was in the 1980s, and my agent told me I was crazy, no publisher would touch such a thing because they couldn't distribute the novel in the Bible Belt. But I wouldn't give up. I wrote a very, very long killer treatment, and had her submit it to my then publisher, Bantam. My agent was right. They wouldn't buy the novel. But they liked it so much on a literary level that, with a few changes, they published the treatment as a novella in an orginal anthology. And a few years later, published it as a free-standing short novel! Entirely different theatrical adaptations have been done in Belgium and France. I consider this one of my most important works of fiction. But alas, the Plague is still with us.

eBook Publisher: Fictionwise.com, Published: 1995
Fictionwise Release Date: July 2007


11 Reader Ratings:
Great Good OK Poor
Available eBook Formats [MultiFormat - What's this?]: eReader (PDB) [93 KB] , ePub (EPUB) [78 KB] , Rocket/REB1100 (RB) [76 KB] , Adobe Acrobat (PDF) [322 KB] , Palm Doc (PDB) [84 KB] , Microsoft Reader (LIT) [118 KB] , Franklin eBookMan (FUB) [143 KB] , hiebook (KML) [208 KB] , Sony Reader (LRF) [122 KB] , iSilo (PDB) [70 KB] , Mobipocket (PRC) [87 KB] , Kindle Compatible (MOBI) [115 KB] , OEBFF Format (IMP) [119 KB]
Words: 26605
Reading time: 76-106 min.
Microsoft Reader (LIT) Format: Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud ENABLED
Adobe Acrobat (PDF) Format:  Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud DISABLED
All Other formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED


Introduction

It was the worst of times, and it was the saddest of times, so what we must remember if we are to keep our perspective as we read these journals of the Plague Years is that the people who wrote them, indeed the entire population of what was then the United States of America and most of the world, were, by our standards, all quite mad.

The Plague virus, apparently originating somewhere in Africa, had spread first to male homosexuals, and intravenous drug users. Inevitably it moved via bisexual contact into the population at large. A vaccine was developed and for a moment the Plague seemed defeated. But the organism mutated under this evolutionary pressure and a new strain swept the world. A new vaccine was developed, but the virus mutated again. Eventually the succession of vaccines selected for mutability itself, and the Plague virus proliferated into dozens of strains.

Palliative treatments were developed, victims might survive for a decade or more, but there was no cure, and no vaccine that offered protection for long.

For twenty years, sex and death were inextricably entwined. For twenty years, men and women were constrained to deny themselves the ordinary pleasures of straightforward unencumbered sex, or to succumb to the natural desires of the flesh and pay the awful price. For twenty years, the species faced its own extinction. For twenty years, Africa and most of Asia and Latin American were quarantined by the armed forces of America, Europe, Japan, and the Soviet Union. For twenty years, the people of the world stewed in their own frustrated sexual juices.

Small wonder then that the Plague Years were years of madness. Small wonder that the authors of these journals seem, from our happier perspective, driven creatures, and quite insane.

That each of them found somewhere the courage to carry on, that through their tormented and imperfect instrumentalities, the long night was finally to see our dawn, that is the wonder, that is the triumph of the human spirit, the spirit which unites the era of the Plague Years with our own.

--Mustapha Kelly

Luna City, 2143

* * * *

JOHN DAVID

I was gunfoddering in Baja when the marks began to appear again. The first time I saw the marks, they gave me six years if I could afford it, ten if I joined up and got myself the best.

Well what was a poor boy to do? Take my black card, let them stick me in a Quarantine Zone, and take my chances? Go underground and try to dodge the Sex Police until the Plague got me? Hell no, this poor boy did what about two million other poor boys did, he signed up for life in the American Foreign Legion, aka the Army of the Living Dead, while he was still in good enough shape to be accepted.

Now you hear a lot of bad stuff about the Legion. The wages suck. The food ain't much. We're a bunch of bloodthirsty killers too bugfuck to be allowed back in the United States fighting an endless imperialistic war against the whole Third World and our combat life expectancy is about three years. Junkies. Dopers. Drooling sex maniacs. The scum of the universe.

For sure, all that is true. But unless you're a millionaire or supercrook, the Legion is the best deal you can do when they paint your blue card black and tell you you've Got It.

The deal is you get the latest that medical science has to offer and you get it free. The deal is you can do anything you want to the gorks as long as you don't screw up combat orders. The deal is that the Army of the Living Dead is co-ed and omnisexual and every last one of us has already Got It. We've all got our black card already, we're under sentence of death, so we might as well enjoy each other on the way out. The deal is that the Legion is all the willing meat sex you can handle, and plenty that you can't, you better believe it!

Like the recruiting slogan says, "A Short Life But A Happy One." We were the last free red-blooded American Boys and Girls. "Join the Army and Fuck the World," says the grafitti they scrawl on the walls about us.

Well that too, and so what?

Take the Baja campaign. The last census showed that the black card population of California was entitled to enlarged Quarantine Zones. Catalina and San Francisco were bursting at the seams and the state legislature couldn't agree on a convenient piece of territory. So it got booted up to the Federal Quarantine Agency.

Old Walter T., he looks at the map, and he sees you could maintain a Quarantine line across the top of the Baja Peninsula with maybe 2000 SP troops. Real convenient. Annex the mother to California and solve the problem.

So in we go, and down the length of Baja we cakewalk. No sweat. Two weeks of saturation air strikes to soften up the Mexes, a heavy armored division and two wings of gunships at the point, followed by 15,000 of us zombies to nail things down.

What you call a fun campaign, a far cry from the mess we got into in Cuba or that balls-up in Venezuela, let me tell you. Mexico was something like 50% Got It, their armed forces had been wiped out of existence in the Chihuaha campaign, and so it was just a matter of three weeks of leisurely pillage, rape, and plunder.

The Mexes? They got a sweet deal, considering. Those that were still alive by the time we had secured Baja down to La Paz could choose between deportation to what was left of Mexico or become black card citizens of the state of California, Americans like thee and me, brothers and sisters. Any one of them who had survived had Gotten It in every available orifice about a hundred and fifty times by us zombies by then anyway.

Wanna moralize about it? Okay, then moralize this one, meatfucker:

The damn Plague started in Africa, didn't it? That's the Third World, ain't it? Africa, Latin America, Asia, except for China, Japan, and Iran, they're over 50% Got It, ain't they? And the It they Got keeps mutating like crazy in all that filth. And they keep trying to get through with infiltrators to give us the latest strain, don't they?

The Chinese and the Iranians, they kill their black carders, don't they? The Japs, they deport them to Korea. And the Russians, they nuked themselves a cordon sanitaire all the way from the Caspian to the Chinese border.

Was I old Walter T., I'd say nuke the whole cesspit of infection out of existence. Use nerve gas. Fry the Third World clean from orbit. Whatever. They gave us the damn Plague, didn't they? Way we see it in the Army of the Living Dead, anything we do after that is only a little piece of what the gorks got coming!

Believe me, this poor boy wasn't shedding any tears for what we had done to the Mexes when the marks starting coming out just before the sack of Ensenada. Less still when they couldn't come up with a combo of pallys that worked any more, and they shrugged and and finally told me it looked like I had reached Conditional Terminal in the ruins of La Paz. Like I said, when I first Got It, they gave me six years, ten in the Army of the Living Dead.

Now they gave me six months.

I shot up with about 100mg of liquid crystal, chugalugged a quart of tequila, and butt-fucked every gork I could find. Think I blew about ten of them away afterward, but by then, brothers and sisters, who the hell was counting?


Icon explanations:
Discounted eBook; added within the last 7 days.
eBook was added within the last 30 days.
eBook is in our best seller list.
eBook is in our highest rated list.

All pages of this site are Copyright © 2000- Fictionwise LLC.
Fictionwise (TM) is the trademark of Fictionwise LLC.
A Barnes & Noble Company

About Us | Bookshelf | For Authors | Free eBooks | Login | News | Privacy | Register | Shopping Cart | Support | Terms of Use

eBook Resources at Barnes & Noble
eBooks · Free eBooks · Cheap eBooks · Romance eBooks · Fiction eBooks · Fantasy eBooks · Top eBooks
Follow us on Twitter!