Rating - 4 out of 5 Although very much a product of the times it was written (1959) Level 7 is an enjoyable, quick apocalyptic read. In some distant or not-so distant future, the world is so at each other's throats that the governments build vast colonies under the Earth to protect them from nuclear war and train soldiers to sit in these bunkers and press the buttons that will ultimately destroy everything.
Soldier X-127 is one of these lucky or unlucky souls - picked because of a certain psychological profile and tricked/forced into the lowest level of the compound (Level 7) he soon finds out his destiny is to never leave a cramped, claustrophobic little world and to instead prepare for World War III. If the war doesn't happen he is still consigned to a little burrow in the ground, if it does than it is up to him and his fellow soldiers to push the buttons to control the war and then to carry on humanity and repopulate the world. X-127 is one of the lucky button pushers - he will be guided by a computer to push buttons that will launch our countries missiles at our enemies. Of course the war does come (later we find out because of an accident) and we pretty much destroy the Earth. At this point the people in the different levels begin communicating to each other. The top level (the most unsafe one) is reserved for normal people that managed to make it before the country was wiped out. Then as you get lower the money and/or political connections of the people rise as the safety rises.
The new underground community tries to carry on as they have been programmed to - the war room is dismantled and turned into a nursery for the new babies (the next generation) and they try to have some type of new "normal" under the ground. This comes to an end as reports from the higher levels start coming in of sickness and contamination. Systems are failing and radiation is making it's ways through the various levels. As level after level succumbs we discover that we have indeed destroyed our planet and humanity.
No happy ending here but then when would a nuclear World War III have a happy-happy/joy-joy ending (okay yeah I know Swan Song - but I have some beef with that one too - reserved for later rants). Definitely dated but you need to project yourself back into time pre-cell phone and pre-internet and this one is a lot of fun (well maybe fun is the wrong word? - umm entertaining - a good read, yes let's leave it at that shall we). You get definite overtones of 1984 and On the Beach but it is also it's own lovable beast. This one falls strongly in the vein of "we are our own worst enemy" and the "humans are the real monsters" morale. If you want a little bit of nostalgia with yoru nuclear war - highly recommended.
