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A British (therefore stiff-upper-lippy) post-apocalypse novel, in which the Chung-Li virus destroys all grasses on the planet and a small band of friends and family must fight their way from London to an idyllic (defensible) valley in Wales. Not quite so I'm-the-man-and-I-will-save-you as Alas, Babylon, but more intense in that the effects are immediate rather than remote. Alas, Babylon has a very unrealistic view of survivable nuclear war; Grass gives us a world that's truly dead, no arguments,
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Jun 22, 2009
T0
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The Death of Grass delivers the most fascinating apocalyptic scenario. The utter failure of the food supply, which modern man often takes for granted, leads to the collapse of the delicate fabric of modern society and it's social contracts. In the age of plenitude we seldom remember how fine a line separates civilization and barbarism.
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Dec 10, 2007
☼Bookish in Virginia☼
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May 20, 2010
Chris Sachnik
marked it as to-read
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May 13, 2012
Rebecca Short, LMFT
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Dec 07, 2017
Fiona Brichaut
rated it
it was amazing
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