Rating:  Summary: Shute, I've procrastinated Review: On The Beach, was a decent book. It was very easy to follow, and the character's were just your everyday people, which helps bring the reality of the story closer to home. The story is about people living in Australia, basically waiting to die. A nuclear war had taken place in the Northern Hemisphere, and now they were waiting for the nuclear cloud from the war that was headed there way, everyone else in the world was gone. They are going to die from the radiation that is carried in the cloud, but because of the air movement, they still have a few months to live. It basically describes these peoples lives and what they do with the little time they have left. On The Beach can be slow, but it is a good book that describes the what could come of a nuclear war.
Rating:  Summary: Good but slow at times Review: On the Beach is a marvelous novel it captures one of the greatest fears of the twentieth and the twenty-first century, nuclear war. Nevil Shute has done a great job of describing different ranges of characters. He has used single, married, and divorced characters. The basic theme of the novel was that everyone was going to die and the world as we know it will come to a devastating end. Although the theme has been used before in several novels this time it is written in a different style. Nuclear war in the Northern Hemisphere has caused so much damage (radiation) that it is now slowly moving to the Southern Hemisphere who are going to be innocent victims. Mr. Shute makes sure he gets the point across that that the war has caused many innocent victims. The only flaw in this novel is that it focused too much on the military making it slow at times. On the Beach is a great fiction novel that informs the reader of the possible future.
Rating:  Summary: Pretty good, slightly slow Review: On The Beach was a good book, although I thought the characters reaction to the coming radioactive winds was unrealistic. Many just stayed at home on their porches drinking a last drink or lying in bed. I for one would be running for Tasmania and eventually Antartica (if it wasint too cold). Maybe I havent lived in one place long anough to have and regets of leaving a lifetime home. But still, you hear about the thousands of refugees from war zones, it seems unlikeley hardly anyone would run from certain, and painful, death. The story was intruiging anyway and I recommend it for a good reader (some of the English terms and styles of writing are confusing). PS: Look up the definition of a fortnight before you read this :)
Rating:  Summary: This book was terrible Review: This book was one of the worst books I've read. Actually I couldn't finish it. It was very slow and there was no action. Not what I was looking for in this type of book. I left it on the last plane because I didn't want to waste the space in my bag.
Rating:  Summary: A superb story, well told and riveting Review: I've read the other reviews. First It is scientifically accurate based on verifitcation from my physicist husband. Second cutting a 120 pages, would leave you with what? Third boring? I read the story in two days, gave up a weekend, and I don't do that anymore. Now, if you read this YOU MUST read Larry Niven's Rainbow Mars collection, particularly the last story, Death in A Cage, which covers this book also. I came upon it surrendipitiously but now I recommend it highly as a great one two punch. Now to On the Beach. I did not know what the storyline was, except my husband recommended it and referred to it often. I was stunned and shocked to find out in Chapter 1 that there had been a Nuclear War started by small powers -- not China, Russia, USA but little one's like Albania in the story or Iraq, now... The spoiled child who if he can't win no one does... I find this plausible. It is well told and romantic -- very romantic and yet...If the bombs get dropped, Shute is right, it goes this way....
Rating:  Summary: Nuclear Destruction....that sucks Review: I thought that On the Beach was a semi-decent book. One major downfall was that it was dull and boring through a good bit of the main story. Instead of 320 pages, I believe it could have been done in about 200, to make the pace of it better. It ties in nicely with our studies in that it deals with life after a world wide nuclear war. I thought it comical that it depicted the Russians as the one of the "bad guys", and it didn't even mention America as being part of the war. The ending was a let down, as everyone just kind of died off with no real plot to it, except for maybe the Moira-Dwight ordeal. Basically, it was boring from beginning to end with the occasional interesting plot twist here and there. I do not agree with the quote that "Every American should read On the Beach...", as it was not that good. I give it a thumbs in the middle, no more.
Rating:  Summary: An Excellent Concept Review: It's too bad that this book suffers so much from lackluster writing. The story is moving, engaging, and heartbreakingly sad. It really makes you wonder what you'd want to do if you know there were only a few weeks left, and how you would feel as the end approached. I found it very difficult to put this book down once I had begun, and very difficult to put it out of my mind once I had finished. The characters are real and believable - very important to a novel of this sort. While it is unfortunate that the author could have used a grammer manual, this is still a book well worth reading.
Rating:  Summary: Great concept, somewhat listless writing Review: On The Beach, as others have said, suffers a bit as a product of its era, not so much for the cold war stuff (which I still find chilling) but for the stilted and polite portrayal of its characters, as starched and straightforward as 50's Hollywood. It also seemed not quite believable that an entire community of people would face demise with the same orderly sense of denial and detachment; I am positive that there would be more chaos than dignity under such circumstances. None of this detracts from the building hopelessness toward the inevitable conclusion, which does benefit from the straightforward writing style. It arrives all too soon just as it would, and I found that part of the book at least to be terribly real and sad, and it stayed in my mind long after I finished. A favorite apocalyptic novel that this made me want to read again (and that I don't see mentioned in some of the top lists here) is This Is The Way The World Ends by James Morrow. This book made me cry.
Rating:  Summary: A Must-Read Book Review: I really enjoyed this book even though it started out pretty slow. As you get into the book it shows a struggle to escape the fallout and survive. Eventually everyone has to accept their fate that their shortened lives will come to an end, including Dwight and Moira. This book kept me interested to keep reading until I came to the end which I knew was inevitable and sad.
Rating:  Summary: Oh So Good Review: "On the Beach" is one of those books that you read for the concept and the story, but not for the quality of the writing. The plot centers around the lives of a few remaining survivors of a nuclear war who live in Australia. Since the was has taken place in the northern hemisphere, Australia has largely escaped unscathed--for the moment. But as prevailing winds approach Australia, they carry lethal doses of radiation with them. The implication of this is that all of the characters in the book--in fact everyone in the world--will inevitably be extinguished. "On the Beach" has a profound psychological impact because it is devoid of the intense action that usually accompanies nuclear apocolypse films. The destruction has already occurred elsewhere and the citizens of Australia are largely going about their business knowing they will soon die. The fact that their infrastructure has not been destroyed and that all of their social aparatus is still intact makes their fate all the more sad and earie. Although this book is set in the Cold War it's outcome is still relevant and feasible today. The nuclear warheads generated by the arms race haven't gone away. The former Soviet Union is a desparate, chaotic place, and as several reviewers pointed out, more small countries are joining the nuclear club. One could say that Nuclear madness has merely transformed itself, but its danger certainly hasn't disappeared. I think everyone should read this book to be reminded of the possible future we all face. I read "On the Beach" in 1989. That same year I had seen "The Day After" and "Testament". For some reason I had a morbid fascination with the end of the world, and what might happen after. "On the Beach" might seem a bit dated now. The consequences of nuclear war have been speculated upon for several years. In 1983 scientists came up with the nuclear winter theory, where all the dust and fallout from the explosions would block out the sun and cause the world to freeze over. It sounds plausible enough. Once the winter was over the ozone layer would be damaged and the planet saturated with ultaviolet light from the sun. Others argue that people would survive somewhere, not everyone would die from radiation. Whatever the case, "On the Beach" is still a powerful book. It makes you wonder how you would feel, knowing how you were going to die and when. The Australians are fortunate in that they are offered suicide pills for when the pain becomes too much. People aren't so worried about nuclear war any more. But on the news this morning I saw Boris Yeltsin remind Bill Clinton that they still have a nuclear arsenal. This was after Clinton threatened Russia with sanctions if Russian forces attacked Grozny... But we've managed to avoid nuclear war up until now, so there's probably nothing to worry about. Is there?
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