Campy Cold War Classic; precursor to the modern prepper-penned end-of-the-world novel
The Survivalist: Total War is the first episode in Jerry Ahern's Cold War era action adventure series featuring ex-CIA agent turned weapons expert/survivalist, John Rourke. Rourke is a classic "men's fiction" action hero (yes, such a genre existed and was popular in its hey-day). In Total War we discover he is an expert on practically everything including medicine (he's a doctor), piloting aircraft, survivalism (we call it "prepping" today), family man, sniper/weapons/combat (ex-CIA paramilitary), motorcycles, charming women, running through blizzards with luggage while declining a ride, etc. You get the idea. Originally published in 1981, World War III starts with a Soviet invasion of Pakistan from Afghanistan (ahhh, the world as it was in 1981... *sigh*) escalating into a five way nuclear conflagration between the US, USSR, PRC, Pakistan and India, which the US mostly loses. Rourke just happens to be on-hand during the initial Soviet thrust across the Khyber Pass. He flies home to Georgia to warn his doubtful wife that nuclear war is imminent. There is a brief but needless description of their love-making -- needless except to remain in sync with the "men's fiction" model -- before he departs on a trip to train the Royal Canadian Mounties (he gets around). WWIII begins with a Soviet first strike while Rourke is in a commercial jetliner trying to get home. Most of America is devastated. Rourke seems pleased that WWIII vindicates his decision to build a mountain survival sanctuary despite his wife's pre-war reservations. After crash landing the airliner in New Mexico and defeating a 60-person armed motorcycle gang almost single-handedly, Rourke and his new sidekick, Paul Rubenstein, set out across America in search of Rourke's family. And the adventure begins...
Jerry Ahern's "The Survivalist" series was the original end-of-the-world novel written by a real prepper. While the series claimed to provide technical insights on survivalism it was short on know-how skills and prepping and very long on describing guns in detail (Jerry Ahern owned Detonics USA and a pair of Detonics Combat Master .45 ACPs figure prominently in the series). The Survivalist follows an end-of-the-world paradigm popular at the time in which America is defeated by the incompetence of politicians and false reassurances of the military. The "prepping" talk was lite, the science was mostly inaccurate and the post-WWIII world was populated by radioactive mutants and SPETSNAZ commandos. Today's apocalyptic fiction is more prepper descriptive and mutants have been replaced by zombies or cannibals. The end now usually comes with government connivance or cover-up -- it's a more dystopian world now than the 1980s.
The Survivalist books are short but action-packed. There isn't much nuance here, just blood, guts and an indestructible protagonist. I understand the series is back out on Kindle. Nice, but I found it in an old-school mass market edition -- just like I first read it as a teenager in 1981. As suspense fiction, it's a 3-star read; as a well-written formulaic classic of Cold War nostalgia, it's 4-star.