There was a pretty cheesy novel called (I'm pretty sure) Kavan that came out about that time. The cover was mostly white and had a man's bearded face on it. The hero and his mentor travel through the ruins of the US, trying to recover books and technology.
I'm NOT referring to Anna Kavan, the current-day author, by the way.
I prefer to completely vex the technologically impared, by using the, "Got your nose!" gag, only I change it to, "Got your epiglottis!" This REALLY gets 'em!
when I heard the description, I immediately thought of Heinlein, not Sixth Column though (although that makes a little more sense) but Farnham's Freehold
@Mathmos: Nope. The story in _Revolt in 2100_ that you're thinking of ("If This Goes On...") features a 1950's-level-technology with some added fillips running a fundamentalist/possibly-partially-LDS-inspired theocracy in the US. No swords, no spears, no nuttin' like that. Some psionics, but, really, nothing that heavily affects the plot. _Sixth Column_ is a different work altogether, and features the adventures of the survivors of a secret U.S. base who, with their Just That Moment Discovered superscience, defeat an (apparently mostly conventional) occupation of the US by the Pan-Asians. Again, no swords, no spears, nothing like that. Just a short-novel-length exploration of Clarke's Law, with "Magic" erased and "Miracles" inserted.
Also, can I just say that I loathe this commenting system? I tend to switch away from comments to check up on details, and every dang time, my entire comment disappears. Pfui.
@capnrob: oh well, I read those books in the 1960s. I guess I can forgive myself for not recalling them very well.
So far I very much dislike this commenting system too. It doesn't work in IE8, and I don't like being part of a caste system and sometimes nothing after the first page of comments will appear.
Can't be Heinlein; not post-nuclear holocaust, but, rather an Occupied America with a preserved (if damaged) social order. The Staff of Mota, in addition, was, well, a staff. Leiber's, on the other hand, is ... well, sort of post-apocalyptic, but is presented more as a Highly Repressed Central European Medieval Theocracy kind of thing, and the weapons aren't spears - they're "wrath rods."
Could this be, I dunno, something along the lines of one of Lin Carter's Burroughsesquades? Or a Buck Rogers kind of thing?
Hmm. Actually, there's a story I remember from an anthology which pretty much DOES fit this - the obligatory invading army confronting superscience somewhere in ... um, California? I vaguely remember this being more mid-to-late-sixtiesish than the others, with the odd variant of libertarian politics that you started to get then
Or it's a bad description of "Lord of Light." There are some references in Lord of Light to atomic blasts ("the tall man of smoke who wears a wide hat"), and there are "spears" that are really some kind of energy weapon--the binder thingy, the Bright Spear, etc. That's a lousy description, though.
@cletar: No - "The Magic Goes Away" is really magic, not post-apocalypse, and it's explicitly set back in Way, Way, Long Ago (12,000 BC? Something like that.) Doesn't match the criteria.
It can't be Deathworld itself; that's set on another planet, and everybody knows that the technology works and is technology. Deathworld 2 features something of the idea, but it's more of a cargo-cult situation, and features no ray-guns - tribe A knows how to make steam engines, and tribe B knows how to make Leyden jars, and so on. Deathworld 3 is basically our heroes from the last two books fighting the Mongols, and only gunpowder is involved; no rayguns disguised as spears.
First thing I thought of was the Hawkmoon series by Michael Moorcock. There are "flame lances" and other post-apocalyptic technology, through the setting is generally medieval other than that.
@matthewtoney: It's very subtle. If you gloss over the flame lances and ornithopters, you miss it. But its there. Its a very future Europe ("Granbretan" instead of "Great Britain"), but its there if you look deep. I admit that the post holocaust part isn't something really relevant to the plot, just some background stuff rarely touched on.
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I'm NOT referring to Anna Kavan, the current-day author, by the way.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saga_of_Pliocene_Exile
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Also...All your nose are belong to us! Yes, they do!
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Also, can I just say that I loathe this commenting system? I tend to switch away from comments to check up on details, and every dang time, my entire comment disappears. Pfui.
07/10/09
So far I very much dislike this commenting system too. It doesn't work in IE8, and I don't like being part of a caste system and sometimes nothing after the first page of comments will appear.
07/10/09
Could this be, I dunno, something along the lines of one of Lin Carter's Burroughsesquades? Or a Buck Rogers kind of thing?
Hmm. Actually, there's a story I remember from an anthology which pretty much DOES fit this - the obligatory invading army confronting superscience somewhere in ... um, California? I vaguely remember this being more mid-to-late-sixtiesish than the others, with the odd variant of libertarian politics that you started to get then
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Or it's a bad description of "Lord of Light." There are some references in Lord of Light to atomic blasts ("the tall man of smoke who wears a wide hat"), and there are "spears" that are really some kind of energy weapon--the binder thingy, the Bright Spear, etc. That's a lousy description, though.
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