- Hello America
Infobox Book
name = Hello America
title_orig =
translator =
image_caption = Cover of first edition (hardcover)
author =J. G. Ballard
illustrator =
cover_artist =
country =United Kingdom
language = English
series =
genre =Science fiction novel
publisher =Jonathan Cape
release_date =June 4 ,1981
english_release_date =
media_type = Print (Hardcover &Paperback )
pages = 224 pp
isbn = ISBN 0-224-01914-7
preceded_by =
followed_by ="Hello America" is a
science fiction novel byJ. G. Ballard , first published in 1981. The plot follows an expedition to aNorth America rendered uninhabitable by an ecological disaster.Plot Summary
Though the exact date is never specifically mentioned in the book, internal references suggest that it takes place around 2080 AD, (though dates as early as 2070 or so have been suggested) several generations after an
ecological collapse rendered North America virtually unlivable. Most of the population was evacuated toEurope andAsia . The bulk of the novel takes place when a European steamship, the SS Apollo, sails to America to try to discover the cause of increased radioactive fallout inEngland .In typical Ballardian fashion, each of the crew members has a secret agenda, and is basically a pawn of their own psychological yearnings, whether for destruction and glory. Most of the Apollo's crew are descended from
expatriate Americans - the protagonist is a 20-ish boy who grew up in the AmericanGhetto inDublin , for instance - and have become mostly assimilated into European society, but still feel some vague draw to the abandoned continent to the west.In the novel, the
Soviet Union dam med theBering Strait in the 1990s, thus changing global weather paterns by reversing the normally clockwise currents in the Pacific Ocean. Although the Russians were able to grow grain as far north as theArctic Circle , a massive drought began east of theRocky Mountains . West of the Rockies, the opposite problem was true. Further, much of coastal Asia freezes over.Though the plot is a straightforward adventure yarn - quite unusual for Ballard - the book is actually a subtle parody of American culture. For instance, the final
President of the United States is the former governorJerry Brown ofCalifornia , who was a promising face in American politics at the time of the novel. His small, ironic role in the novel represents both the triumph and ultimate failure of west coastliberalism of the lateCold War era: when faced with a massive ecological crisis that threatens (and indeed ultimately destroys) the nation, Brown's solution is to build a large youth center, a twice-life-size fiberglass replica of theTaj Mahal , and then abandons the country so he can devote himself to self-improvement. The novel states that Brown dies at age 114 in a Buddhist Monastery in a glaciatedJapan .Eventually the Apollo Expedition comes across survivors from the previous expedition thirty years earlier. One of these survivors - clearly insane - has taken to calling himself "President
Charles Manson ," but none of the Apollo's crew get the reference because the Manson killings occurred 120 years earlier in a completely different world.In the end, it is implied that Europe needs America, if only as a place where the darker elements of the Western mindset can be allowed to play themselves out without inconveniencing decent people. There is a kind of rebirth that re-establishes something akin to the old order, allowing insanity to be sublimated out in small doses to everyone, rather than bottled up in one person where it proves to be really really dangerous. Possibly for the first time ever,
nuclear weapon s are used for a constructive purpose, and the 'New World Order' that arises from the events of the book contains both the promise of a better future, and the understated vague promise/threat of fantasmagoric horrors to come, though presumably in smaller doses.External links
* [http://www.depauw.edu/sfs/backissues/62/rossi62art.htm Images from the Disaster Area] , an article on "Hello America" and other works by Ballard.
* [http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgb.html The Terminal Collection: JG Ballard First Editions]
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