Cold War Classic, Post-Apocalyptic Nuclear Protest Fiction for TEOTWAWKI
Polish-born Mordecai Roshwald was a humanities professor at the University of Minnesota and author of numerous academic treatises on Theology and social issues. In 1959, at the height of the post-war Atomic Panic, he decided to tackle the issue of the looming Nuclear Apocalypse by writing Level 7, a science fiction social commentary on the Bomb that became his best-selling, best known work and a classic of the genre.
Every "The-End-of-the-World-as-We-Know-It" (or TEOTWAWKI for short) novel has an ironic twist that begs for social commentary. The apocalypse or armageddon or the collapse is Man reaching the height of his evolutionary/technological/woke-awareness/civilization only to discover it's a house of cards, doomed to die as a result of a nuclear war, natrual disaster, cosmic disaster, alien invasion, environmental disaster, economic collapse, dystopian chaos, zombie apocalypse, rapture, pandemic, civil war, or the Second Coming. It's as if human beings, with all their secular scientific advancements and thinking simply cannot escape the deep-rooted notion that divine justice is inevitable and mankind is doomed.
That feeling was strong in the 1950s, when people assumed an Atomic War was a push of a button away.
Mordecai Roshwald felt another academic article about the Bomb would only preach to the choir. So he chose to write a piece of protest fiction he hoped would reach the masses. He was so ignorant of the fiction market he didn't even realize he was writing "science fiction." Indeed, he succeeded beyond his expectations and Level 7, despite its transparent attempt to make people wake up to the reality of their political leader's willingness to keep them in bondage to the Bomb, became a best-seller and a classic of apocalyptic fiction.
Level 7 is the purported diary of a "Push-button" warfare (PBX) officer who is doomed to live out his existence in Level 7. Level 7 is a self-sufficient, sealed atomic bunker designed to protect the PBX officers of his unit and all of their support staff in the event of a nuclear war. It is also designed to perpetuate the human race in the likely event that nuclear war destroys all life and renders the earth uninhabitable for 500 years. The story is meant to be social commentary and doesn't depict with any accuracy what life in a 1950's missile silo or bunker was really like.
In fact, the author goes out of his way to create his own reality, never hinting at what real-world superpower is behind Level 7.
The world of Level 7 has two nuclear superpowers whose only real differences are dialectic. Allies and satellite nations surround them but are never named. Roshwald naively hoped that by writing without specifics or naming names, Level 7 might be published on both sides of the Iron Curtain. The novel's ending is about what is to be expected, although the introduction to the book, in which a Martian archaeologist finds and translates our PBX officer's diary, essentially spoils the ending.
It's a fine sci-fi novel and the only one Roshwald ever wrote. While some of the lengthy discourse about life in Level 7 is dull and implausible (pandemic veterans will wonder why there are no exercise machines or streaming channels to watch), this is, after all, a social commentary... but one wrapped in a very readable and fascinating science fiction TEOTWAWKI wrapper.
Read it! It is recommended.