The history leading to the situation which Rogers finds upon waking—the US weakened by a war with Europe and then conquered by overwhelming Han fleets of airships—has some similarities with
H. G. Wells'
The War in the Air (written in four months in 1907 and serialised and published in 1908, in
The Pall Mall Magazine), already a classic at the time when
Armageddon was written. In Wells' novel, the United States is attacked by
Imperial Germany, New York is destroyed by the Germans, and though the Americans manage to fight off the German attack, they are then overwhelmed by enormous Sino-Japanese air fleets. After
Armageddon 2419 A.D. was published, John F. Dille, the head of the
National Newspaper Service, which
syndicated comics and features, read Nowlan's novella, sought out Nowlan to produce a syndicated column in strip form, "A story in strip form of conditions in America some five hundred years hence." The comic strip character was named
Buck Rogers, and artist
Dick Calkins was hired to do the illustrations. The story of the comic strip diverges from the novel after the first few strips and never returns to it. While
Armageddon 2419 A.D. heavily emphasizes war, military tactics and technology, the Buck Rogers comic strip is based on adventures and romantic problems. The book features lethal violence and gore, while the comic strip does not. The entire "occupied America" theme of the original book was tacitly dropped, and the
United States in which the comic strip Buck Rogers lives seems a direct continuation of the present-day one, which had not undergone centuries of Han occupation. While it sometimes claimed that they introduced the idea of "personal flight" with the use of devices attached to the body, this idea is based on the fact that a flying man is depicted on the cover of the August 1928 issue of
Amazing Stories, which included the first part of
Armageddon 2419 A.D. In fact the cover illustrates
E. E. Smith's serial
The Skylark of Space, which began in the same issue.
Armageddon 2419 A.D. features anti-gravity belts that allow the wearer to leap for remarkable distances, but do not permit indefinite flight.
Edgar Rice Burroughs'
The Moon Maid saga has some similarities to
Armageddon 2419 A.D., in which American "tribes" rebel against Moon people who have previously conquered the world. In the 1980s the original
Armageddon 2419 A.D. was taken up again and authorized sequels to it were written by other authors working from an outline co-written by
Larry Niven and
Jerry Pournelle and loosely tied-in with their bestseller ''
Lucifer's Hammer'' (1977). The first sequel begins c. 2476 A.D., when a widowed and cantankerous 86-year-old Anthony Rogers is mysteriously rejuvenated during a resurgence of the presumed-extinct Han, now called the Pr'lan. The novels include: •
Mordred by
John Eric Holmes (Ace, January 1981, ) • ''Warrior's Blood'' by
Richard S. McEnroe (Ace, January 1981, ) • ''Warrior's World'' by Richard S. McEnroe (Ace, October 1981, ) • ''Rogers' Rangers'' by
John Silbersack (Ace, August 1983, ) ==See also==