1984
George Orwell, 1984
(repression and oppression in grim totalitarian future)
Bleak Prospects (nightmare scenarios for the future of human society)
Patrick White, A Fringe of LeavesĀ Ā ("civilised" woman in distress, rehabilitated by contact with aboriginal "primitive" people)
Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451
Russell Hoban, Riddley Walker
Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid"s TaleĀ Ā (grim future: totalitarian, religious oppression, anti-women)
George Turner, The Sea and Summer
Paul Theroux, O-ZoneĀ Ā (efforts to make a viable post-nuclear society in US wilderness)
Anthony Burgess, A Clockwork OrangeĀ Ā (crime and class-war in future Britain)
Inner Hell (the nightmare is inside us)
Will Self, My Idea of Fun
William Golding, Lord of the FliesĀ Ā (choirboys lost on desert island revert to satanic evil, humanity"s dark side)
Georges Simenon, The MurdererĀ Ā (criminal psychologically destroyed by guilt)
Joseph Conrad, Heart of DarknessĀ Ā (wilderness as a satanic, engulfing force, human evil symbolised)
Fay Weldon, Life and Loves of a She-DevilĀ Ā (betrayed wife takes macabre, comic revenge)
The Ghastly Past (totalitarian, fundamentalist nightmares from "real" history)
Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet LetterĀ Ā (religious bigotry in Pilgrim Fathers America)
Willa Cather, Death Comes for the ArchbishopĀ Ā (Catholic missionaries test their faith in 1870s Mexican wilderness)
Graham Greene, Brighton RockĀ Ā (crime and redemption in 1930s England)
Alexander Solzhenitsyn, One Day in the Life of Ivan DenisovichĀ Ā (repression of dissidents in Stalinist labour-camp)
Maxim Gorky, Foma GordeevĀ Ā (underbelly of Tsarist Russia in decline)















