'''The Death Of Grass''' (aka ''No Blade Of Grass'') is a
1956 post-apocalyptic science fiction novel written by the British author
Samuel Youd under the pen name of
John Christopher, the first in a series of post-apocalyptic novels written by Youd. It deals with the concept of a
virus that kills off all forms of
grass.
The novel was written "in a matter of weeks" and liberated Youd from his day job. It was retitled ''No Blade of Grass'' for the US edition as supposedly the US publisher thought the original title "sounded like something out of a gardening catalogue" and the film rights were sold to MGM.
[1] The movie version,
No Blade of Grass, was released in
1970.
Plot summary
As the story opens, the initial viral strain has already attacked
rice crops in East Asia causing massive
famine and a mutation has appeared which infects the staple crops of West Asia and
Europe such as
wheat and
barley, threatening a famine engulfing the whole of the
Old World, while Australasia and the Americas attempt to impose rigorous quarantine to exclude the virus.
The novel follows the trials and struggles of the narrator's family as they attempt to make their way across the
United Kingdom, which is already descending into
anarchy, to the safety of his brother's
potato farm.
The book is unusually harsh in terms of
post-apocalyptic science fiction of the period, with the main characters sacrificing many of their morals in order to stay alive. At one point, when their food supply runs out, they kill an innocent family simply to take their bread. The narrator justifies this with the belief that "it was them or us." Some critics have viewed this as an attempt by the author to distance the work from the
cosy catastrophe pattern made popular by
John Wyndham in a similar way to the relationship between
William Golding's ''
Lord of the Flies'' and its model ''
Coral Island'' by
R. M. Ballantyne.
References
1. John Christopher's life and works