The Old Men at the Zoo

1961 novel by Angus Wilson From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Old Men at the Zoo is a novel written by Angus Wilson, first published in 1961 by Secker and Warburg. It explores the moral compromises of those in power and the fragility of democratic institutions in crisis.

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The Old Men at the Zoo
Cover
First edition cover
AuthorAngus Wilson
LanguageEnglish
GenreDystopian fiction
Published1961 by Secker and Warburg
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint
Pages352 pp
OCLC4482168
Dewey Decimal823.91
LC ClassPZ3.W68895
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Written from the perspective of an administrator at the London Zoo, the book deals with events before and during a limited, possibly nuclear war that results in the imposition of a dystopian pan-European dictatorship which imprisons anyone suspected of opposition. Fanatic government representatives plan to use the zoo for the public execution of political prisoners in a return to the Ancient Roman Damnatio ad bestias (condemnation to beasts) before a further change in government lead to another reversal of fates.

The book was adapted, with many changes – nuclear bombing of London, not present in the novel, was added – into a 1983 BBC Television series by the scriptwriter Troy Kennedy Martin.[1]

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