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The Purple Cloud

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3.49  ·  Rating details ·  1,071 ratings  ·  171 reviews
"If now a swell from the Deep has swept over this planetary ship of earth, and I, who alone chanced to find myself in the furthest stern, as the sole survivor of her crew . . . What then, my God, shall I do?" The Purple Cloud is widely hailed as a masterpiece of science fiction and one of the best "last man" novels ever written. A deadly purple vapor passes over the world ...more
Paperback, 296 pages
Published September 1st 2000 by Bison Books (first published 1901)
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Average rating 3.49  · 
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 ·  1,071 ratings  ·  171 reviews


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Bill Kerwin

A very strange book combining an accomplished fin-de-siecle prose style with the cosmic horror of Poe, it possesses an apocalyptic savagery and fierce isolation all its own.
Althea Ann
May 05, 2016 rated it did not like it
Stories from this time period love having some sort of introductory framing device. This one has to be the most convoluted I've encountered: the author tells us that he has received a letter from a dying friend, a hypnotist. Accompanying the letter was a notebook, which the hypnotist says contains a transcription of the trances of one of his patients. While in trance, the patient psychically travels in time, but rather than directly observing events, reads manuscripts. This story is a manuscript ...more
Forrest
Those who know me know that I self-identify as a loner. But a loner with a social side. So a novel about what it is to be utterly alone (as in everyone else in the human race has died off) could seem like the perfect segue to delightful flights of fancy. But I did mention I have a social side. Shiel may have had a social side, but if his protagonist, Adam Jeffson, is any mirror of him, Shiel must have been quite aloof; borderline sociopathic.

Shiel is an interesting, if scandalous, person. His
...more
Evie Braithwaite
Set text for University

This was a strange apocalyptic novel which follows Adam Jeffson: the first man to reach the North Pole and the last man left alive on earth. Upon discovering that a peach-smelling purple cloud of poisonous gas has obliterated the world, he travels around the silent globe in search of human life. As the years pass by, he slowly succumbs to madness, questioning Gods plan and sets about burning and thus destroying his planet.

Being a last man on earth novel, there was a lack
...more
Lorenzo Berardi
Apr 18, 2010 rated it really liked it
This book is amazingly entertaining and, by coincidence, extremely topical. I wonder why it never became that popular worldwide. Perhaps it will soon.

Just think about the trouble we're currently having with that Icelandic vulcano, the tongue-twister Eyjafjallajokull.
What if those spiteful ashes were deadly poisonous?
Well, in "The Purple Cloud" they are.

M.P Shiel was not able to foresee the future (and had no intention to do it), but definitely was some steps forward. He surely had a sort of
...more
Kay
This is a strange and unsettling novel, quite original. It chronicles one man's discovery that he is the last man on earth. The central character, Adam, returns from an Arctic expedition to find that a purple cloud has passed over the surface of the earth, killing everything. The main plot of the novel concerns the mental instability this causes in Adam, who spirals down into feeling that perhaps mankind deserved this end. He also goes through exhilarative feelings of absolute dominion over the ...more
Terence
Jul 12, 2010 rated it it was ok  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Apocalypse/post-apocalypse fans
Recommended to Terence by: Downloaded from the Gutenberg Project
Shelves: sf-fantasy
Immediately upon finishing The Purple Cloud I had to reread H.P. Lovecraft's novella "At the Mountains of Madness." Both stories deal with forbidden polar expeditions and world-shattering revelations. Where Lovecraft's story revealed a past and a cosmos where humans hardly signified, Shiel's is a retelling of the Biblical Flood myth and an OT God's disgust with His Creation (at least the human part of it). It's that latter theme - a psychopathic deity that must be worshipped and loved, "Though ...more
Alfred Searls
May 23, 2012 rated it it was amazing
Shelves: reviewed
Creepy, influential and accomplished what else is there to say about Matthew Phipps Shiels 1901 landmark last man on Earth novel - The Purple Cloud?

Well, quite a bit really, if like me you want to exorcise its somewhat baleful shadow from your mind. Dont get me wrong, this is a remarkable work and one which I have no hesitation in recommending; its just that its one of the most disquieting books Ive ever come across.

The story begins with a gloriously atmospheric account of an expedition to the
...more
Manny
Jan 11, 2011 rated it it was ok  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: science-fiction
The discussion this morning around Day of the Triffids reminded me of this obscure and extremely bizarre novel, which I must have read when I was about ten or eleven. The Wikipedia article is excellent - I had quite forgotten most of the outrageous plot, which starts when God wipes out all human beings except one man and one woman to punish us for visiting the North Pole.

I went to abebooks and immediately located copies, but sanity returned in time to save me £5. Divine intervention?
Doug
Nov 11, 2012 rated it it was ok
This is one of those books that has a great premise (post-apocalypse, last man alive), but is ponderous to read. I'm glad I tackled it, though, if only for foundational literacy in the genre. It's one of the first of its type, if not the first. The Purple Cloud is written in a prose style clearly indicating its 100+ year age, and I found it bloated, or maybe "florid" to be nicer. Almost better than M.P. Shiel's book is John Sutherland's intro placing it in the stream of other last-man novels, ...more
Anna
Nov 01, 2013 rated it really liked it
After being stuck on an overheated train for six and a half hours yesterday, I didnt have the energy to compose a proper review of this book. I only managed three words: The purplest prose. For never before has a novel been so aptly named. The Purple Cloud combines elements of Mary Shelleys The Last Man, J-K Huysmans Against Nature, H.G Wells The Shape of Things to Come, Joanna Russ We Who Are About To..., and Hampton Sides In the Kingdom of Ice: The Grand and Terrible Polar Voyage of the USS ...more
Bev
M. P. Shiel's The Purple Cloud tells the story Adam Jeffson, the last survivor of a doomed Polar expedition and, ultimately, the last man on Earth. For some inexplicable reason, the North Pole, which bears no resemblance whatsoever to the Garden of Eden in the Bible, has become associated with that place and the idea behind The Purple Cloud is that if anyone every reaches the Pole and enters the forbidden territory once again, then all of mankind will be wiped out. Many expeditions are mounted ...more
Stewart
Jan 17, 2011 rated it it was amazing
A the time, I was exploring this genre as a complete novice...I bought this book at a truck stop in Missouri in 1978 and had to pull over and read - I was so absorbed! Bleak; captivating, intriguing...

Comparable to H.G. Wells in vision

A very good read!!
Nynke
Oct 26, 2018 rated it it was ok  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: university
Well that was 40 pages of setting the scene and building up tension and then 220 pages of anticlimax.
Chris Laskey
Mar 13, 2013 rated it liked it
CONTAINS SPOILERS:
As an historical amusement certainly one has to give Shiel credit for producing, at times, a hypnotic and uneasy novel about the last man on earth, yet one can't help but be dismayed that his writing indulges and tends to meander to the point of exhaustion. Prior to our modern era of Science Fiction there were a mere handful of novels about the Last Man so one can't dismiss his work. Mary Shelley's novel "The Last Man" barely registers any chill as she really uses that novel as
...more
Elidor
Mar 27, 2013 rated it it was amazing
I foolishly sold my copy of this marvelous book years ago and wish I had it back.

With prose as purple as the cloud which destroys mankind, Matthew Phipps Shiel vividly brings to life the mind of the last madman let loose upon the too-quiet earth. Crushing guilt and bitter anger fuel his increasingly dangerous and quixotic symphonies of destruction as he familiarizes himself with fuses and explosives and surrenders himself to towering, psychotic rages. There is a euphoric sense of utter freedom
...more
Derek Davis
Nov 21, 2015 rated it really liked it
Written as an intermittent diary, this is one of the first and perhaps the finest of "last man" novels. While on a trek to claim the North Pole (this was published in 1901), Adam Jefferson's partners die one by one (including at Adam's hand), leaving him sole survivor and victor. But when he returns, by luck, determination and aching misadventure, he slowly comes to realize that all of humanity indeed, nearly all land life has been exterminated by a cyanide cloud from massive eruptions in the ...more
D.M. Dutcher
Apr 13, 2013 rated it really liked it
It's a different "last man on earth" book, which focuses on a man who is going insane from the lack of people, and suspects he may be manipulated by one of two powers. It's compelling because there is no "stiff upper lip" here-the main character is tormented and even diabolical.

Jeffson is a doctor who wishes he could go on a North Pole expedition. His wife poisons one of the members, enabling him to go and win glory for her, and it goes downhill from there. Through no little tragedy, Jeffson
...more
Aaron Meyer
The beginning of this book began fairly well with an expedition to the North Pole. Only after reaching the North Pole did everything change. On the way back Adam finds that everybody is dead, no matter where he goes in the whole world, he is the last man alive. Then begins the middle part of the story. Honestly this is the most tedious and patience trying portion of the book. His going about the towns looking for survivors or naming all the type of ships he comes across on the ocean, is stifling ...more
Mike
Sep 06, 2013 rated it it was ok
Shelves: fiction
I have the edition of The Purple Cloud recently published by Penguin Classics and annotated by John Sutherland. Among other things, Sutherland's notes focus on the differences between this and other versions. The notes are helpful, and explain quite a bit about Shiel himself, as well as his writing and research.

Many hail this book as a "masterpiece." It is not.

It is a "last man" novel that may well have been ground-breaking but it is not particularly well-written. As Sutherland mentions in one
...more
Guy
Shiel has a marvelous vocabulary - his sentences are beautiful, but the plot of this story bogs down midway. The descriptions of ship after ship, city after city become tedious, and some of the action seems beyond the means of the characters described. I was reminded of "Frankenstein" and "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" in the sense that the flourishing style of the author is sometimes neglectful of the aspects of realism necessary to make fantasy believable. I think it's all well and good to ...more
Kelly
What I learned from this book is that if you see a big purple cloud coming toward you and it smells like peach blossoms, either get yourself to the North Pole or have yourself sealed inside a wine cellar as a punishment, because that cloud is bad news.

Seriously, this is a classic "last man on earth" SF tale. Think Robinson Crusoe, if Robinson Crusoe had been sort of a psychopath to start with, and hadn't been improved by being left alone on the earth. The prose reads like a nineteenth-century
...more
Joe Santoro
Jan 13, 2016 rated it did not like it
Shelves: soft_sf
Yeah, so half this book consists of the main character, the last man on Earth, wondering the wonder and blowing stuff up. If you've always wanted to read a turn of the century travelogue where the end of every trip involves leveling the city, this book is for you. Otherwise, no.

There is a bit of philposphy at the end, but nothing worth suffering though the rest of the book for. I suppose at the time perhaps the concept of being the last man on Earth and what that would do to one's mind was
...more
Joseph
Sep 22, 2015 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
A turn of the century fable about the sins of mankind and the madness of apocalypse. Quite oddly written with lengthy and detailed descriptions of machines and exotic locations that gives the novel a large distinct lexicon. Although dated the adventure is rich and the twists and turns help maintain interest.
Chase Insteadman Mountbatten
[Testo italiano in fondo]
Published in 1901, this novel seems to anticipate something of the atmosphere of another sci-fi classic, Stanislaw Lem's Solaris; it could even be possible that Lem had read it and draw some inspiration from it.
The Purple cloud is full of visionary suggestions but it is not made of only that. I found astonishing similarities between the happenings at the end of the book and issues concerning the very recent use of social media as a substitute for vis à vis relations,
...more
A Mig
Sep 30, 2017 rated it it was amazing
Shelves: science-fiction
I have mixed feelings about this book. There are quite a few gems in there (beware of spoilers):

(1) an apocalyptic event (toxic purple cloud) hinted only from progressive signs, providing a lot of suspense relating to that strange new world that we discover bit by bit. I praise the author for building up this silent post-apocalyptic world in a turn-of-the-20th-century setting. Memorable!
(2) the North Pole exploration reminded me that this part of the world was still terra incognita in the early
...more
Sean McLachlan
Feb 11, 2014 rated it really liked it
This 1901 novel is one of the earliest "last man on Earth" scenarios and has long been considered a classic of science fiction in general and post-apocalyptic fiction in particular. It involves a man who goes on a polar expedition and returns to find the human race wiped out by a poisonous purple vapor. He then has to reconcile himself to being the last member of the human race.

Shiel was a masterful writer and the story of the man's adventures and his psychological breakdown are richly told. So
...more
Matthew Tree
Jul 21, 2013 rated it really liked it
This the first of the Last Man plots, set in 1902, long before Charlton Heston became the Omega Man or a young Charles Bronson stalked a pulverised New York in en episode of The Twilight Zone. A volcanic eruption sends a huge cloud, as poisonous as it is purple, around the world, killing everyone except the narrator, who is stuck in the North Pole. He eventually finds his way south and discovers that the world is full of corpses, be they on the ships he runs into, the cities he explores, or the ...more
Norman Cook
Aug 30, 2015 rated it liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: e-book
A man traveling in the Arctic survives a world-encompassing purple cyanide cloud. Upon his return to civilization he realizes that he is the sole survivor, and with no society to restrict him he becomes an all-powerful, insanely destructive wanderer, reveling in his deliberate razing of entire empty cities -- not a character one can particularly sympathize with. The novel is filled with extraneous information about engines, equipment, and clothes that slows the story down. I found it hard to ...more
Herman Gigglethorpe
For a book about humanity being destroyed as divine punishment for visiting the North Pole featuring a delusional narrator, it's very dull.

Adam Jeffson may say that title refers to cyanogen or prussic acid, but it's much more likely that the purple prose reached critical mass and condensed into a killer cloud. Some sentences have as many as nine commas! And I'm not referring to a long list!

Anyone who can wade through this writing has more patience than I do. If you are curious about this book,
...more
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Matthew Phipps Shiel was a prolific British writer of West Indian descent. His legal surname remained "Shiell" though he adopted the shorter version as a de facto pen name.

He is remembered mostly for supernatural and scientific romances. His work was published as serials, novels, and as short stories. The Purple Cloud (1901; 1929) remains his most famous and often reprinted novel.

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