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Free Study Guide: Alas, Babylon by Pat Frank - Free BookNotes Downloadable / Printable Version ALAS, BABYLON: ONLINE PLOT SYNOPSIS / BOOK NOTES
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As Malachi leaves, we meet Lib McGovern, Randy’s latest love interest. She has come by the house to convince Randy that he needs to get a real job in a city - she thinks he is turning into a vegetable living in the country. Only yesterday, Randy would have seriously considered this idea but now, in the light of Mark’s warning, he knows the cities will soon be death traps. He decides he needs to tell her about Mark’s warning.
But, before he can, Dr. Gunn arrives to tell Lib about her father and mother. In an aside, we learn about Dr. Gunn’s background - he was an idealist who wanted to help those suffering from deadly diseases, but the financial burdens of a failed marriage trapped him into a life of delivering the babies of the locals and treating their minor problems. Dr. Gunn has just visited the McGovern’s - Lib’s mother, a diabetic, wanted to change her prescription and her father was slowly dying from nothing to do.
Randy then tells Lib and Dr. Gunn about Mark’s warning of the coming war. Dr. Gunn believes Randy and gives Randy and Lib a number of prescriptions to fill, just in case.
This chapter ends by switching scenes from Fort Repose to a Navy Task
Group in the Eastern Mediterranean. The ships are in an area where it
is difficult to maneuver and an unidentified aircraft is following them.
In chapter 3, we start meeting more of the characters that will play important roles later in the novel. We meet Malachi Henry, a hardworking black man, poor but honest, loyal, and smarter than he looks. We also meet the McGoverns - Lib, Randy’s latest love interest; her diabetic mother, Lavinia; and her father, Bill, forced into an early retirement and slowly dying of boredom. We meet Dr. Dan Gunn, a long-time friend of Randy’s, forced into a job he hates by the consequences of a marriage gone sour.
In an aside, we learn that Randy had served in the military with black men. As a result, he harbors no overt resentment or racism toward blacks, unlike Kitty Offenhaus. Still, he has some trouble relating to Malachi Henry as an equal, at least now. Later events will put the final nail in the coffin of Randy’s indecisive attitude toward blacks, particularly Malachi.
The artesian well system will become important later in the novel. An artesian
well is a well whose water is under sufficient pressure to flow up the
well shaft without the need of a pump. Generally, artesian wells are deep
and, as a result, the water is often hard and sometimes has an odd smell
or taste. If the water has too many dissolved minerals, it is undrinkable
and useable only for irrigation. In the case of the well in the novel,
the water is drinkable although Randy never cared for the taste. The water
source for the well is deep enough that it would not be contaminated by
chemicals, waste (animal or human), or radioactive fallout.
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. 12 May 2008 |