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Five Post-Apocalyptic Novels Set on a Nearly Empty Earth

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Five Post-Apocalyptic Novels Set on a Nearly Empty Earth

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Five Post-Apocalyptic Novels Set on a Nearly Empty Earth

Stories about life, love, and danger in a vacant, depopulated world.

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Published on January 22, 2025

Photo by Natalya Letunova [via Unsplash]

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Photo of a person standing on concrete ledge in an abandoned building

Photo by Natalya Letunova [via Unsplash]

It’s pretty common for monsters or other SFF antagonists to be the cause of the end of the world in fiction—be they zombies, vampires, aliens, or robots. On the other hand, there are other world-ending catastrophes that instead leave the Earth nearly empty—think highly fatal diseases and environmental disasters. With no monsters running rampant and human civilization left in tatters, the few survivors are left to wander a basically vacant world. But fear not, a lack of monsters doesn’t mean a lack of tension, and these post-apocalyptic stories really shine in crafting an eerie atmosphere. Here are five examples, ranging from harrowing tales of survival to a sweet story of budding romance.

I Who Have Never Known Men (1995) by Jacqueline Harpman (translated by Ros Schwartz)

Cover of I Who Have Never Known Men by Jacqueline Harpman

Originally published in French, I Who Have Never Known Men is a fairly short book, but it packs a lot into its pages. Our unnamed narrator is locked in an underground cage with thirty-nine other women. She’s the youngest captive and doesn’t have any memory of life before the bars, and her fellow inmates are reluctant to speak of the world as it once was. As strange as their caged existence is—they struggle to make sense of the various rules and routines imposed on them by the male guards—things are just as bizarre above ground. 

Jacqueline Harpman’s stark prose perfectly matches the desolate world in which these women live. But even though themes of isolation and confusion loom large in the narrative, it’s just as much about hope, community, and purpose. While it’s not uncommon for post-apocalyptic stories to withhold information about what exactly caused the world to end, I Who Have Never Known Men takes this to the extreme by continually leaving its characters—and, by extension, its readers—in the dark. Some people may find the lack of answers frustrating, but I think that’s kind of the point.

A Boy and His Dog at the End of the World (2019) by C.A. Fletcher

Cover of A Boy and His Dog at the End of the World by C.A. Fletcher

It’s no secret that I’m a sucker for post-apocalyptic stories featuring canine characters and A Boy and His Dog at the End of the World offers up two such good dogs: Jess and Jip. These faithful hounds are the companions (pets doesn’t feel like the right word!) of Griz, a teenager who lives on a little Scottish island with his family. There aren’t a lot of people left in the world, with fertility rates having plummeted many years earlier.

One day, Griz’s family are visited by a friendly traveler called Brand, who regales them with stories of his adventures. But when Griz wakes up the next morning, he realizes that Brand has stolen Jess and fled. With Brand’s boat still in sight, Griz makes the rash decision to pursue the thief (with Jip in tow, of course). He knows nothing about the mainland, but the deep bond he shares with Jess gives him the drive to jump headfirst into danger.  

I love that the dogs are just as strongly characterized as the human beings in this novel. I love the adventurous twists and turns of the plot. I love the eerie descriptions of the crumbling cities and towns on the mainland. And I love that Griz—who is sometimes naive, but always courageous—will stop at nothing to get his dog back. 

The Girl in Red (2019) by Christina Henry

Cover of The Girl in Red by Christina Henry

The Girl in Red is a retelling of “Little Red Riding Hood,” but Christina Henry massively expands her version beyond the borders of the original fairy tale by giving it a post-apocalyptic setting. A deadly airborne disease has rapidly spread through the population, but Cordelia—who goes by Red—has a plan to get to the safety of her grandmother’s house deep in the woods. The story is told via two timelines: one in the build-up to, and immediate aftermath of, the pandemic and one a few months later when the country is nearly deserted.

Red may only be 20 years old, but she has a few survival skills and a heck of a lot of determination (and she certainly won’t let her prosthetic leg hold her back!). I absolutely flew through this book and, if anything, I wish it were a little longer. I would happily have spent more time with Red as she treks through the woods, fights off dangerous fellow survivors, and witnesses the horrifying mutation of the disease. 

The Road (2006) by Cormac McCarthy

Cover of The Road by Cormac McCarthy

The Road is one of the most unrelentingly bleak post-apocalyptic books I’ve ever read. Told in pared-down but evocative prose, the story follows a man and his young son as they walk south to a (hopefully) warmer climate. What caused the end of the world isn’t revealed to the reader, but whatever it was left the US in a dire state: no plants grow, everything is covered in ash, and temperatures have plummeted.

The descriptions of the derelict world are haunting and the lives of the man and boy are unbearably hard. Along with being constantly hungry and cold, the pair also have to evade the few other starving survivors who are still hanging on—the vast majority of whom have been driven to inhumane acts of brutality. But for all of the story’s heart-shattering darkness, the relationship between the father and son is also a testament to the power of connection and love.

All That’s Left in the World (2022) by Erik J. Brown

Cover of All That’s Left in the World by Erik J. Brown

If constant stress, horror, and sadness isn’t what you’re after right now, then perhaps the heartfelt sweetness of YA novel All That’s Left in the World will be more your style. Don’t get me wrong, there are still moments of anxiety-inducing action as well as grief over what has been lost, but these elements are sprinkled throughout the narrative, rather than comprising the entire story.

Chapters alternate between the POV of two teenage boys, Jamie and Andrew. With a deadly flu having swept the world, Jamie is on his own at his family’s cabin in the woods of Pennsylvania. Andrew stumbles across the cabin while looking for supplies, and although the two are initially wary of each other (stranger danger goes into overdrive during the post-apocalypse, after all), they have an instant rapport that soon develops into a deeper connection.

The pair encounter plenty of stressful situations when they leave the cabin, but everything feels a little bit lighter than is typical of most post-apocalyptic stories. This is thanks in part to their budding romance, but it’s also down to the humorous through line provided by the easy banter between the pair.


I would love to know which post-apocalyptic books you would have picked for this list. Feel free to leave any suggestions in the comments below, even if they only partially fit the theme (sections of Stephen King’s The Stand, for instance, feature characters traveling across a deserted America)! icon-paragraph-end

About the Author

Lorna Wallace

Author

Lorna Wallace has a PhD in English Literature, but left the world of academia to become a freelance writer. Along with writing about all things sci-fi and horror for Reactor, she has written for Mental Floss, Fodor’s, Contingent Magazine, and Listverse. She lives in Scotland with her rescue greyhound, Misty.
Learn More About Lorna
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Chaironea
Chaironea
4 months ago

Matthew Phipps Shiel’s 1901 book The Purple Cloud. One of the classics I read while commuting to work as a teenager. Not an uplifting read.
The hero has been on an expedition to the North Pole while a volcanic eruption erases nearly all mankind by hydrogen cyanide.
It was (loosely) put into film as The World, the Flesh and the Devil in 1959.

phuzz
4 months ago

I read The Road once, but there’s no way I’m ever going to read it again, (or watch the film). It was just that good at conjuring up an incredibly bleak future.

For a less bleak future, how about The Past is Red by Catherynne M. Valente.

Ann McMillan
Ann McMillan
4 months ago

The Dog Stars, by Peter heller ( with another good dog!), Bannerless by Carrie vaughn, the Water Knife, and the Wind-up Girl. By baciogalupi

Jerry
Jerry
4 months ago

Where Late The Sweet Birds Sang. Excellent book though it may be out of print.

dlong
4 months ago

A Boy and His Dog by Harlan Ellison. And. On the Beach by. Neville Shute

gherlone
4 months ago
Reply to  dlong

co-sign on anything by Shute. On the Beach is an utter masterpiece.

wiredog
4 months ago

“Alas Babylon” is post-apocalyptic, but it’s just the northern hemisphere that is depopulated. “A Canticle For Leibowitz” starts, and ends, with a depopulated Earth.

Ceilsa
Ceilsa
4 months ago

A Canticle For Leibowitz is a good one.

dalilllama
4 months ago

Seveneves by Neal Stephenson has a lot of build up to the apocalypse (the Moon exploded), then life on Earth is basically extinguished, then some space-dwellers explore what’s left.

Adrian Tchaikovsky’s Service Model provides a unique version, following a valet-droid which inexplicably killed its human owner, and discovers that the coroner, investigating officer, etc. are all robots, explained to be a temporary measure in the absence of the human who officially fills the roles. The valet-bot is sent to be reprogrammed, and finds a wasteland of robots following now-meaningless programming, and endless backlogs where human authority is needed to complete a task. Actual humans are notable by their absence.

David Weber’s Dahak series provides a rare non-Earth example: the Moon was replaced millennia ago by the vast titular starship, created by an enormous, ancient human empire that spread across a significant chunk of the galaxy and had a population in the trillions; the humans of Earth are merely a forgotten offshoot of an earlier iteration of it. So, when genocidal aliens threaten Earth, the people who now control the starship and go looking for help, only to find the empty remnants of a civilization, where everyone died long ago due to a teleport network, rogue nanotechnology and poor quarantine protocols.

Russell H
Russell H
4 months ago

“The House in November” (1970) by Keith Laumer.

Geoff
Geoff
4 months ago

No older books? Earth Abides, Canticle For Liebowitz, even Childhood’s End. All stellar offerings written far better than modern books.

AdamM
4 months ago

I’d probably include Adiamante by L.E. Modesitt Jr in this list, a book I’ve read a number of times.

Raskos
4 months ago

Waubgeshig Rice’s Moon of the Turning Leaves has a group of Anishinaabe survivors exploring a largely empty Southern Ontario after what appears to be a catastrophic failure of technological civilization due to a Canfield Event.

cdr.bowman
cdr.bowman
4 months ago

Along with Earth Abides and A Canticle for Leibowitz, here are a few older. but classic examples:

By the Waters of Babylon

https://www.fadedpage.com/books/20110103/html.php

and:

The Scarlet Plague

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/21970/21970-h/21970-h.htm

kenneth
4 months ago

Malevil (1972) by Robert Merle

Wjreeds
Wjreeds
4 months ago

The ‘Emberverse’ series written by S.M. Stirling of which ‘Dies the Fire’ is the first book. The story starts at the apocalypse and follows various groups of people as they navigate the new reality. There are several books in the series and the later ones are more in the fantasy genre but the first 4 or 5 are squarely post apocalyptic. I look at the world a little differently after reading these books.

Mike
Mike
4 months ago

Swan Song by Robert McCammon

Martin Kent
Martin Kent
4 months ago

“The blue book of Nebo” is a wonderful YA novel, originally written in Welsh then translated into English, about a mother and son surviving in a post-apocalypse world. I’m well past Y A age, but loved this story

Last edited 4 months ago by Martin Kent
DorisJ
4 months ago
Reply to  Martin Kent

I believe that good story telling is found in YA stories. When I go to B&N or BAM I always check out the YA sci-fi section.

While a LOT of YA sci-fi seems to follow a romantic pattern I’m not fond of, there are gems to be found.

DrNobby
DrNobby
4 months ago

How about The Wall by John Lanchester

Oona
Oona
4 months ago

Station Eleven ..great book which is about a post virus world but is actually uplifting in the end

Scott
Scott
4 months ago

I am Legend- Richard Mathieson

PaultheRoman
4 months ago

Wow, I can’t believe I’m the first to mention David Brin’s excellent “The Postman”. I can’t recommend Kevin Costner’s movie treatment however. Then, of course, there’s “Lucifer’s Hammer” by Pournelle and Niven, also quite good. “Orion Shall Rise” by Poul Anderson or “Farnam’s Freehold” by the “Dean” himself, Robert Heinlein.

dalilllama
4 months ago
Reply to  PaultheRoman

Postman and Orion Shall rise aren’t in empty or mostly empty worlds in any sense. Both contain multiple major civilizations with cities and all.

Edward
Edward
4 months ago
Reply to  PaultheRoman

I agree about Postman. And about the movie. I was so excited to see it, and so disappointed when J did.
I recommend “Emergence” by David Palmer. Initially serialized in Asamov SciFi mag. After being out of pr I no for decades, now available on Amazon.

wiredog
4 months ago
Reply to  PaultheRoman

“Lucifer’s Hammer” has not aged well at all over the years, and “Farnham’s Freehold” didn’t age well over the first week after publication.

TBF, with “Farnham’s Freehold” you can see what Heinlein’s trying to do, but it’s a real swing and a miss.

Trish
Trish
4 months ago

Cell by Stephen King is one of my favourites

Me.
Me.
4 months ago

I read Empty World by John Christopher as a teen, and it made an impression. A young man, grieving his parents recent death, is one of the few survivors of a sudden plague, and seeks out a few other survivors, with mixed results.

Fadge
Fadge
4 months ago

The Passage by Justin Cronin is one of the best books ever in this genre…

Whitefish
Whitefish
4 months ago

I look forward to reading these. Thanks for the list, the reviews. One note: the title of your article misleading as a world without people is not an “empty” place. Thanks.

Jenn
Jenn
4 months ago

The Last One to Leave The Party, definitely. An illness starts in America and takes the whole world. As far as Our Narrator can tell, she’s the last person in Britain. It also has a Good Boy.

Last edited 4 months ago by Jenn
ubxs113
4 months ago

I agree with several others that Earth Abides by George Stewart is excellent.

j. p.
j. p.
4 months ago

Station 11. by Emily John St. Mandel. one of my all time favorite books of any genre.

DorisJ
4 months ago

Echoes of War by Cheryl Campbell

Out of the Dark (#1 of 3 books) by David Weber. Technically STARTS with an apocalyptic event but quickly turn into post

LifeLik3 (#1 of 3) by Jay Kristof YA books Soon to be a movie but judging by the trailer on YT takes the books out of order.

Silo series by Hugh Howey Already a series but I can’t speak to it since I don’t get Apple TV

Hull Metal Girls, The Abyss Surrounds Us, The Edge of Abyss YA books by Emily Skrutskie. Hull Metal takes place in space and is a standalone. The other 2 take place on a post apocalypse Earth. Both deal with the collapse of human society

Tin Men by Christopher Golden While technically not POST apocalyptic the book takes place DURING a massive shutdown of the grid. Excellent read if you like military sci-fi

The 5th Wave series by Rick Yancy YA books. The first was made into a movie that more or less followed the book. The 2nd and 3rd books weren’t adapted for the screen. So if you wondering what happened after the movie you’d have to read the books. The Infinite Sea and The Last Star are the follow up books.

dalilllama
4 months ago

The world of Damnation Alley seems pretty empty; certainly most of North America is a monster-haunted wasteland, which Hell Tanner has to cross to get between the two remaining outposts of humanity with a treatment for a disease that’s looking like eradicating one of them.

I also just thought of Battlestar Galactica, either version, in which the world(s) they came from are gone entirely and the rag-tag space convoy is all that’s left.

James Davis Nicoll
4 months ago
Reply to  dalilllama

This plot development was shamelessly ripped off homaged in the sovereign nation of Canada’s Johnny Chase, Secret Agent of Space. In season one, Chase is a secret agent IN SPACE for the Earth Empire. In season two, the antagonist alien Thorks blow up the sun, forcing the human survivors to flee in the direction of more plot.

About the only bit from the show I remember is Johnny asking his ship how it is, if the speed of light is absolute limit, they are getting from place to place faster than a photon would and being told (as I recall) not to ask questions whose answers might upset him.

AlanBrown
4 months ago

I enjoyed Gryphon by Crawford Killian. A few incredibly powerful but incredibly lonely people are all that is left of humanity when a race of malevolent attacks the ruined Earth.

Raskos
4 months ago
Reply to  AlanBrown

Killian’s relative obscurity is undeserved.

Dave
Dave
4 months ago
Reply to  Raskos

One word: Icequake

James Davis Nicoll
4 months ago

Yokohama Shopping Trip is an odd one. Something dramatic happened in the past, the world is half-flooded but what happened is never discussed. As well, it is clear humanity is on its way out, to be replaced by amiable androids, but nobody much minds. Mostly, it is about an android running her teashop.

Girls Last Tour takes place on an Earth that has been Trantorformed. This turns out to be a terrible idea because if civilization ever breaks down, as it did in the manga’s recent past, there are no handy refuges to which the protagonists can flee.

Nicki
Nicki
4 months ago

Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood is one of my favorites in this genre:
Oryx and Crake is at once an unforgettable love story and a compelling vision of the future. Snowman, known as Jimmy before mankind was overwhelmed by a plague, is struggling to survive in a world where he may be the last human, and mourning the loss of his best friend, Crake, and the beautiful and elusive Oryx whom they both loved. In search of answers, Snowman embarks on a journey–with the help of the green-eyed Children of Crake–through the lush wilderness that was so recently a great city, until powerful corporations took mankind on an uncontrolled genetic engineering ride. Margaret Atwood projects us into a near future that is both all too familiar and beyond our imagining.

Jenny Islander
Jenny Islander
4 months ago

The Stand by Stephen King presents a nearly empty world as a backdrop for cosmic shenanigans. The extended edition includes vignettes set during the time after the superflu stops killing people but before the death rate slows down. All sorts of people who are, as far as they know, the last ones, and their very bad ends…

The Quiet Earth (the movie from the ’80s) spends a lot of time with the mental state of a man who is, as far as he knows, the last person left. Not left alive, per se: everybody else didn’t die, as best he can tell–they just aren’t here.

“Solitude” by Ursula K. Le Guin is set on a planet that is thickly covered with ruins nearly everywhere that is habitable by humankind. The few descendants of the city builders eke out a living in the few green spaces left after a human-caused planet-wide extinction comparable to the end of the Cretaceous.

Scott
Scott
4 months ago

Andre Norton “Starman’s Son”” Lucifers Hammer” can’t remember author.

Davro
Davro
4 months ago

Terry Brooks, Shannara series and prequel Knight of the Word books are all linked into one giant post apocalypse saga. They even tried a tv show with it but the production and promotion team pretty much made a mess of it so it never continued.

Fi
Fi
4 months ago

I really enjoyed the Lucky Prepper by Emma Zeth

Bill
Bill
4 months ago

What about the 1949 award winning novel, “Earth Abides?” Seems to me this list is pointless without including this page turner by George Stewart!

CT2
CT2
4 months ago

The Maddadam Triology by Margaret Atwood.

mectech21
mectech21
4 months ago

The talented Terry Bisson (RIP) graced us with a follow-up to A Canticle for Leibowitz entitled St. Leibowitz and the Wild Horse Woman. As with so many “sequels” to iconic intellectual properties crafted by someone other than the originator, your mileage may vary.

Carrie Vaughn now has three novels set in the world of Bannerless.

But the one I really came here to talk about is a fascinating (and underappreciated, imho) standalone by Michaela Roessner entitled Vanishing Point (1993). At some point in the 1960s, an unexplained Rapture-like event caused 90% of the human population to disappear overnight. In the ensuing 30 years, communities of survivors have congregated at varied points in the Bay Area, including the storied Winchester Mansion (aka the Winchester Mystery House). Renzie & her companions lead interesting lives as they continue efforts to understand what caused the Vanishing and the ongoing effects of the phenomenon, while keeping themselves fed and fending off the Heaven Bound – who are convinced that unbelievers like Renzie, who are growing food, maintaining structures, and leading lives in a transformed world, are preventing the Bounders from reuniting with their Vanished loved ones.

Aelfrida
Aelfrida
4 months ago

Frustratingly I cannot remember the details, but can anyone tell me the name of the post-apocalyptic book featuring a transgender diabetic? Read many years ago.

larag
4 months ago

I just finished (after having a copy in my TBR pile for lo these many years) The Slave and the Free by Suzy McKee Charnas. The one surviving bastion of “civilization”, the Holdfast, was founded by powerful men who hid in a bunker while the world ended. One woman escapes and finds two societies made up of women safely outside and past the boundaries of the Holdfast, but it’s clear that the female societies are both small and getting smaller, and the Holdfast is also disintegrating into a sludge of toxic masculinity and infighting. Neither the men of the Holdfast or the free women outside believe there’s any civilization or indeed, life at all, beyond the territories they know. I’ll have to read the other books in the series to find out.

shorts
4 months ago

Can I suggest Lindsey Pogue’s Savage North Chronicles – I only started reading last year so haven’t completed the series yet but I’m hooked with the idea of a virus that either kills you (approx 90%) or turns you into some kind of superhuman.

Amy Verkruissen
Amy Verkruissen
4 months ago

I Who Have Never Known Men will keep you thinking about it for a really long time. A very interesting and unique story.

Martinephgrave
4 months ago

Just read Boy on the Bridge and Girl with all the gifts……not many ‘normal’ folk around ..lots of ‘hungries’ who are technically dead. Loved both books and a believable portrayal of virus (fungus) decimating society. OK the hungries are an extreme result of a virus but totally feasible that a future ‘event’ …chemical, biological could destroy our civilisation very easily. Both books have profound endings

Jean Lamb
Jean Lamb
4 months ago

Surprised that no one has mentioned THE STAND by Stephen King, though I disliked his “The West As Evil” theme–notice that nobody from the west ever makes it east to Mother Abigail?

queenuneeq
4 months ago

The Brief History of the Dead – I don’t want to say too much, but Earth is definitely depopulated in this surprisingly hopeful novel.

Kikishua
Kikishua
4 months ago

I recently read the sequel to “All That’s Left In The World” by Erik J Brown (“The Only Light Left Burning”) which is also worth reading – although by this point there are more people around.

Heartily second the spookily depressing film “The Quiet Earth” as mentioned below.

And would like to add C. Robert Cargill to the mix with “Sea Of Rust”, and sequel/prequel “Day Zero” – post-human extinction via robot uprising

stephenkehoe
4 months ago

For bleak, The Genocides by Thomas Disch always satisfies (maybe not the right word?), for nostalgia I still go back and re-read Alas, Babylon and given the topic (almost every one is dead) I can’t think of an uplifting one. :(

bethmitcham
4 months ago

Z is for Zachariah but Robert C O’Brian managed to freak me out as a kid.

Pete M Wilson
Pete M Wilson
4 months ago

Depending on what you mean by empty, perhaps Hiero’s Journey?

PS How do you format italics?

Last edited 4 months ago by Pete M Wilson
Jeff
Jeff
3 months ago

Earth Abides definitely belongs in this list. It shocked me considering its 1949 publication date how still relevant and current it seemed, especially during the COVID pandemic.

CrimsonRooke
3 months ago

Wanderers and Wayward by Chuck Wendig

pjameijs
3 months ago

I want to mention :
– by John Wyndham may specifically be mentioned: The day of the Triffids, The Chrysalids
– JG Ballard : the Burning Earth
– Clifford Simak : City 

Michael
Michael
3 months ago

I recommend Z for Zachariah by Robert O’Brian. It’s a fairly easy to read post-apocalypse story. AND there’s a dog.