Nevil Shute - On The Beach

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On The Beach: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Nevil Shute's "On The Beach" is a classic for good reason. Shute takes the most horrific event one can imagine—a worldwide nuclear event—and then turns the microscope on it, focusing in on just a few ordinary people who must wait for death as it drifts over to their hemisphere. We see military personnel, housewives, businessmen, and more. They come alive because they are just like you and me and the people next door.
Shute's very great accomplishment here is to examine how each of the characters deals with their certain death. Everyone knows they'll die eventually; these characters have the difficulty of knowing that death will arrive soon, and that it will be slow and agonizing. What do they do? Each reacts differently and the humanity and humility with which some of the characters make their choices is startlingly powerful. Especially in a time when the world seems so uncertain, so cruel, this is an important book to read—or re-read if you picked it up years ago. Prepare yourself for a powerfully moving experience.
"THE MOST IMPORTANT AND DRAMATIC NOVEL OF THE ATOMIC AGE"
—WASHINGTON POST AND TIMES HERALD
THE GREAT INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER — OVER 3,000,000 COPIES SOLD!
A WORLD WAITING TO DIE
The radioactive winds had not yet hit Australia. There, survivors of the accidental nuclear war, men and women destined to be the last human beings on earth, prepared for extinction. Some found solace in religion, others in alcohol and frenzied sex, and hundreds stood waiting for their government ration of cyanide pills, hoping they would not have to use them—knowing they would.
NEVIL SHUTE'S MAGNIFICENT AND MOVING BESTSELLER—
"What a terrific Shute this is against the supreme folly of our times. As a piece of writing it is terrific. As a world warning it is more terrifying than anything yet put into print: It compels staying until the dreadful finish."
—Brig. General S.L.A. Marshall

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She said accusingly, "You held on to the mainsheet!" And then she said, "Oh hell, my bra’s coming off?"

Indeed, she had contrived to give the knot between her shoulder blades a tweak as she went into the water, and it now floated by her side. She grabbed it with one hand and said, "Swim round to the other side and sit on the centreboard. She’ll come up all right." She swam with him.

In the distance they saw the white motorboat on safety patrol turn and head towards them. She said to her companion, "Here’s the crash boat coming now. Just one thing after another. Help me get this on before they come, Dwight."

She could have done it perfectly well herself, lying face down in the water. "That’s right—a good hard knot. Not quite so tight as that; I’m not a Japanese. That’s right. Now let’s get this boat up and go on with the floe."

She climbed on to the centreboard that stuck out horizontally from the hull at water level and stood on it holding on to the gunwale while be swam below, marvelling at the slim lines of her figure and at her effrontery. He bore weight down on the plate with her and the boat lifted sodden sails out of the water, hesitated, and then came with a rush. The girl tumbled over the topsides the cockpit and fell in a heap as she cast off the mainsheet, and Dwight clambered in beside her. In a minute they were under way again, the vessel tender with the lit of water on her sails, before the crash boat reached them.

"Don’t do that again" she said severely. "This my is sun-bathing suit. It’s not meant for swimming in."

"I don’t know how I came to do it," he apologized. "We were doing all right up till then."

They completed the course without further incident, finishing last but one. They sailed in to the beach, and Peter met them waist deep in the water. He caught the boat and turned her into the wind. "Have a good sail?" he asked. "I saw you bottle her."

"It’s been a lovely sail," the girl replied. "Dwight bottled her and then my bra came off, so one way and another we’ve had a thrilling time. Never a dull moment. She goes beautifully, Peter."

They jumped over into the water and pulled the boat ashore, let down the sails, and put her on the trolley on the slipway to park her up on the beach. Then they bathed off the end of the jetty and sat smoking in the warm evening sun, sheltered from the offshore wind by the cliff behind them.

The American looked at the blue water, the red cliffs, the moored motorboats rocking on the water. "This is quite a place you’ve got here," he said reflectively. "For its size it’s as nice a little club as any that I’ve seen."

"They don’t take sailing too seriously," Peter remarked. "That’s the secret."

The girl said, "That’s the secret of everything. When do we start drinking again, Peter?"

"The crowd are coming in at about eight o’clock," he told her. He turned to his guest. "We’ve got a few people coming in this evening," he said. "I thought we’d go down and have dinner at the hotel first. Eases the strain on the domestic side."

"Sure. That’ll be fine."

The girl said, "You’re not taking Commander Towers to the Pier Hotel again?"

‘‘That’s where we thought of going for dinner.’’

She said darkly, "It seems to me to be very unwise.

The American laughed. "You’re building up quite a reputation for me in these parts."

"You’re doing that for yourself," she retorted. "I’m doing all I can to whitewash you. I’m not going to say a word about you tearing off my bra."

Dwight Towers glanced at her uncertainly, and then he laughed. He laughed as he had not laughed for a year, unrestrained by thoughts of what had gone before. "Okay," he said at last. "We’ll keep that a secret, just between you and me."

"It will be on my side," she said primly. "You’ll probably be telling everyone about it later on this evening when you’re a bit full."

Peter said, "Maybe we’d better think about changing. I told Mary we’d be back up at the house by six."

They walked down the jetty towards the dressing rooms, changed, and rode back on their bicycles. At the house they found Mary on the lawn watering the garden. They discussed ways and means of getting down to the hotel, and decided to harness up the grey and take the buggy down. "We’d better do that for Commander Towers," the girl said.

"He’d never make it back up the hill after another session in the Pier Hotel."

She went off with Peter to the paddock to catch the grey and harness her. As she slipped the bit between the teeth and pulled the ears through the bridle she said, "How am I doing, Peter?"

He grinned. "You’re doing all right. Never a dull moment."

"Well, that’s what Mary said she wanted. He’s not burst into tears yet, anyway."

"More likely to burst a blood vessel if you keep going on at him."

"I don’t know that I’ll be able to. I’ve worked through most of my repertoire." She laid the saddle over the mare’s back.

"You’ll get a bit more inspiration as the night goes on," he remarked.

"Maybe."

The night went on. They dined at the hotel and drove back up the hill more moderately than before, unharnessed the horse and put her in the paddock for the night, and were ready to meet the guests at eight o’clock. Four couples came to the modest little party; a young doctor and his wife, another naval officer, a cheerful young man described as a chook farmer whose way of life was a mystery to the American, and the young owner of a tiny engineering works. For three hours they danced and drank together, sedulously avoiding any serious topic of conversation. In the warm night the room grew hotter and hotter, coats and ties were jettisoned at an early stage, and the gramophone went on working through an enormous pile of records, half of which Peter had borrowed for the evening. In spite of the wide-open windows behind the fly wire, the room grew full of cigarette smoke. From time to time Peter would throw the contents of the ash trays into the wastepaper bin;, from time to time Mary would collect the empty glasses, take them out to the kitchen to wash them, and bring them back again. Finally at about half-past eleven she brought in a tray of tea and buttered scones and cakes, the universal signal in Australia that the party was coming to an end. Presently the guests began to take their leave, wobbling away on their bicycles.

Moira and Dwight walked down the little drive to see the doctor and his wife safely off the premises. They turned back towards the house. "Nice party," said the submarine commander. "Really nice people, all of them."

It was cool and pleasant in the garden after the hot stuffiness of the house. The night was very still. Between the trees they could see the shore line of Port Phillip running up from Falmouth towards Nelson in the bright light of the stars. "It was awfully hot in there," the girl remarked. "I’m going to stay out here a bit before going to bed, and cool off."

"I’d better get you a wrap."

"You’d better get me a drink, Dwight."

"A soft one?" he suggested.

She shook her head. "About an inch and a half of brandy and a lot of ice, if there’s any left."

He left her and went in to get her drink. When he came out again, a glass in each band, he found her sitting on the edge of the verandah in the darkness. She took the glass from him with a word of thanks and he sat down beside her. Alter the noise and turmoil of the evening the peace of the garden in the night was a relief to him. "It certainly is nice to sit quiet for a little while," he said.

"Till the mosquitoes start biting," she said. A little warm breeze blew around them. "They may not with this wind. I shouldn’t sleep now if I went to bed, full as I am. I’d just lie and toss about all night."

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