Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Literature / TheAshesSeries

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Direct link.


* ForTheEvulz: The Night People apparently had the authority and power to start WW3. Why didn't they just control the world behind the scenes? See trope.

to:

* ForTheEvulz: The Night People apparently had the authority and power to start WW3.WorldWarIII. Why didn't they just control the world behind the scenes? See trope.

Added: 111

Removed: 113

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Mary Suetopia has been cut per TRS: [1]. Appropriate examples are moved to Utopia


* MarySueTopia: The Southern United States of American, a nation built entirely on the Rebels' right-wing ideals.


Added DiffLines:

* {{Utopia}}: The Southern United States of American, a nation built entirely on the Rebels' right-wing ideals.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* ArgentinaIsNaziland: One of the many foes that Raines's army faces is an army of South American Neo-Nazis led by the descendant of a Nazi fugitive.

Added: 415

Changed: 17

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: The position of all smart and recurring villains in the Ashes series.

to:

* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: The position of all smart and recurring villains in the Ashes series.series is to run for it.
* SmallRoleBigImpact: Carl Adams, a right-wing fanatic who even the main characters view as a madman, engineers the nuclear war that causes TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt and the subsequent rise of new governments such as Ben's secessionist movement, kicking off a forty book series. However, [[DiscOneFinalBoss Adams is killed in the fifth chapter of the first book, making way for more (mostly liberal) antagonists.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* OmniscientCouncilOfVagueness: The first book has a scene where a cabal of military leaders gather at a hunting lodge to discuss a right-wing conspiracy to start WorldWarIII. They talk about the motives and numbers of the people involved and the odds that they'll succeed (they do), but are rather vague when discussing what they know about the plan to start the war. After the meeting, most of the members make a beeline away from major population centers and are never seen again.

to:

* OmniscientCouncilOfVagueness: TheOmniscientCouncilOfVagueness: The first book has a scene where a cabal of military leaders gather at a hunting lodge to discuss a right-wing conspiracy to start WorldWarIII. They talk about the motives and numbers of the people involved and the odds that they'll succeed (they do), but are rather vague when discussing what they know about the plan to start the war. After the meeting, most of the members make a beeline away from major population centers and are never seen again.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* OmniscientCouncilOfVagueness: The first book has a scene where a cabal of military leaders gather at a hunting lodge to discuss a right-wing conspiracy to start WorldWarIII. They talk about the motives and numbers of the people involved and the odds that they'll succeed (they do), but are rather vague when discussing what they know about the plan to start the war. After the meeting, most of the members make a beeline away from major population centers and are never seen again.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Dewicked trope


* InfantImmortality: Subverted.

Added: 219

Changed: 2

Removed: 204

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ApocalypseHow: Mostly a Class 1. Nearly all governments have either fallen or become police states,

to:

* ApocalypseHow: Mostly a Class 1. Nearly all governments have either fallen or become police states,states.
* AuthorTract: The entire series is basically Johnstone pushing his conservative views.



* AuthorExistenceFailure. [[OutlivedItsCreator It didn't take.]]



* OppressiveStatesOfAmerica: The post-war United States has turned into this, at least in the areas where it still holds authority.



* PoliceState: The post-war US government. Of course, it was already becoming one before the war, and the nukes only accelerated the change.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Not to be confused with TheAshes.

to:

Not to be confused with TheAshes.
UsefulNotes/TheAshes.

Changed: 17

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
don\'t refer to yourself when adding examples


* FailureIsTheOnlyOption: For the bad guys, that is. In the whole series, this troper can remember TWO times this worked for the villains. And the Rebs recovered without a sweat.

to:

* FailureIsTheOnlyOption: For the bad guys, that is. In the whole series, this troper can remember there are TWO times this worked for the villains. And the Rebs recovered without a sweat.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Moving from main namespace

Added DiffLines:

William W. Johnstone's "Ashes" series is perhaps the most popular piece of pulp fiction still in issue today. Even two decades after they've been published, they continue to fly off the Wal-Mart shelves.

Which is interesting, because Johnstone's characters would probably kill most of their readers.

The "Ashes" series concerns a nuclear war which results in TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt. Governments collapse, people die, and the world is left, as Ben Raines is so often to point out later, to "rise out from the ashes". The whole thing occurs because the [[StrawmanPolitical evil librul govrnment]] is trying to ban firearms, and somehow gets away with it. Members of the military rebel, supposedly starting a nuclear war.

Ben Raines, former elite soldier for the US, former mercenary, full time writer, and ultimate AuthorAvatar, is offered a place in it but, in his "folly", refuses. After he survives the war (thanks to being allergic to wasp stings), he dithers for a while before taking control of the remaining rebels, and forming his own state and then his own nation.

As the series wears on (it's a total of 40 issues), Raines and his Rebels face such varied threats as criminal gangs, liberals, [[ThoseWackyNazis Nazis]], Soviets, the Night People (a surprisingly non-threatening overarching villain group), terrorists, more liberals, Middle Eastern terrorists, yet MORE liberals...the list goes on.

Sound good? Well...no, it's not. Read on.

Not to be confused with TheAshes.

----
!!Provides Examples Of:

* AmericaSavesTheDay: About when Raines decides to invade Ireland and England (and possibly France). Then, Raines and his Rebels become the official army of the new UN and this becomes the plot of most of the rest of the series.
* ApocalypseHow: Mostly a Class 1. Nearly all governments have either fallen or become police states,
* AuthorAvatar: Ben Raines is arguably Johnstone as he wishes to be.
** Given Raines' tendency to be a brilliant general, virile lover, father figure [[AFatherToHisMen to his soldiers]] and stray orphans alike, and a two-fisted, machine gun-wielding kicker of much ass, he might even be called a [[IncrediblyLamePun a Cannon Sue.]]
* AuthorExistenceFailure. [[OutlivedItsCreator It didn't take.]]
* AncientConspiracy: The Night People have supposedly existed long enough to carve their own hidden civilization. They're also played up as major threats, but the Rebels tend to beat them easy.
* AntiHero: Raines and his Rebels fight some pretty nasty people...by being slightly less evil and a whole lot more tricky.
* AuthorityEqualsAsskicking: Rebel leadership seems to work off the "Dynasty Warriors" principle; when Raines, for example, is loosed on the enemy, he kills then by the dozens. Despite being a middle-aged man who's been almost killed several times.
* BadassDriver: Cooper, Raine's personal driver.
* BigBad: Several. The longest-lasting Big Bads are the Night People/Believers/Whatever, though they never provide much of a threat.
* BigDamnHeroes: The Rebels usually come off like this, on the occasions when the population isn't already beaten into the ground.
* BodyguardCrush: Jersey, Ben Raines' personal bodyguard, has one of these.
* BondVillainStupidity: Despite everyone constantly insisting that Raines' death would end the Rebels forever, when the villains capture him (quite often), they always save him for other things. Which always backfires.
* CharacterDevelopment: Subverted; no matter what the characters go through, the most that'll happen is that they'll reference it a little while later.
* {{Cult}}: Several minor and major villains are in cults, the most important being relatively long-lasting villain Sister Violetta's Ninth Order. One cult is also a Rebel ally, led by comic relief character Emil Hite.
* CurbStompBattle: The Rebels are the gods of this trope. Just about every battle they're in is a curb stomp. It's usually handled quite poorly. On the TWO occasion when they suffered a major loss, the enemy was smart enough to 1) outnumber them so vastly that defeat was the only option, and 2) do that, except with more ambushing.
* DeusExMachina: Whenever things start to look bleak for the Rebels, something happens to give them the advantage.
* DividedStatesOfAmerica: After the war, the USA splits into three nations. We have the "original" United States, which controls the Northeast and northern Midwest, The Southern United States of America, which controls the South and most of the Midwest, and the Western United States of America, which controls the western states.
* DressingAsTheEnemy: An occasional tactic the Rebels use. Quite often a basis for humor.
* DrowningMySorrows: The Rebel leaders are said to do this. Though, being [[AntiHero The Rebels]], who knows.
* DungeonBypass: The Rebels have cornered their enemy in his heavily-fortified fortress. Taking it will require the lives of many men. Their response? Shell the place into oblivion. Almost every freakin' time.
* EvilBrit: Subverted by Rebel commander Dan Gray.
* EvilGloating: The villains usually indulge in this. They're either met by unresponsive heroes, or the heroes use the time to turn the tables.
* FailureIsTheOnlyOption: For the bad guys, that is. In the whole series, this troper can remember TWO times this worked for the villains. And the Rebs recovered without a sweat.
* FinalBattle: On the rare occasions when one happens, it's usually almost anti-climactic. For one of the few exceptions to this, take Raine's one-on-one battle with long-time villain Sam Hartline.
* ForTheEvulz: The Night People apparently had the authority and power to start WW3. Why didn't they just control the world behind the scenes? See trope.
* FriendToAllChildren: Harm a child (which all "Ashes" villains do) and Raines will kill you.
* GratuitousSpanish: When dealing with the South American Nazi hordes of Jesus Dieguez Mendoza Hoffman, you'll most often hear their Mooks speaking in Spanish. Sort of justified in that their Mooks are South American conscripts.
* HeelFaceTurn: Happens quite often, in fact. To the point where several of Raines' commanders are former villains. Including known rapist and Aryan supremacist Georgi Striganov (he got better).
* HitchhikerHeroes: Raines self-imposed this one in the fifth book. He hasn't returned to it since.
* HollywoodAtheist: The Night People (a.k.a. The Believers, for some reason) are like this, as one of the more rational ones explains to Raines. Mostly used to make them seem more evil.
* HollywoodHealing: Raines again. The dude FELL OFF A MOUNTAIN and is still insisting on fighting in the front lines.
* ImAHumanitarian: The Night People. They can eat normal food if they want, but their favorite food is apparently human flesh. Carved from a live human. FOR TEH EVILZ!
* InfantImmortality: Subverted.
* LieDetector: Used by the Rebels to test possible applicants, along with various other odds and ends.
* MagneticHero: Raines. To an almost ridiculous point.
* MarySueTopia: The Southern United States of American, a nation built entirely on the Rebels' right-wing ideals.
* MyCountryRightOrWrong: A few of the more noble [[AntiVillain AntiVillains]] are like this.
* NebulousEvilOrganization: The Night People come off as this sometimes.
* NiceJobBreakingItHero: The original Rebels start the war that allows all this to happen.
* NeverFoundTheBody / LeftForDead: When the villains think they've killed Raines, they rarely if ever try to check. Now, after the dude FELL OFF A MOUNTAIN in the first book, there was probably no need. After he SURVIVED, you'd think it'd become standing policy to blow up the body and light fire to its chunks before assuming him done with.
* {{Oireland}}: Ben and the Rebels eventually clean up America and decide to invade the UK. Their first target is Ireland, which is peopled largely by stereotypes.
* OneSidedBattle: Almost every fight the Rebels get into, particularly in America (with the exception of New York).
* PassingTheTorch: Raines is supposed to be doing this with his son, Buddy. Despite that, there's no gradual handing over of his authority; Raines continues to rule, Buddy's just one of his commanders.
* PoliceState: The post-war US government. Of course, it was already becoming one before the war, and the nukes only accelerated the change.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: In addition to fighting against the evil liberal government, Raines and company have also clashed with the KKK and Nazis.
* RapeAsBackstory: Find one woman in all of the Ashes series who's explicitly said to NOT have been raped.
* RapeAsDrama: Happens rather frequently, particularly in the earlier books, but expect any captured woman to suffer through this. Repeatedly. In detail.
* RecapEpisode: The majority of the second book copies directly from the first, with only about half of it being new.
* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: The position of all smart and recurring villains in the Ashes series.
* StormingTheCastle: Almost never happens. Usually, they just shell the place into oblivion.
* StrawmanPolitical: If you're almost anything but a Johnstone-style Republican, you're evil, insane, or both. Unless you're only deluding yourself into thinking you're not. While Johnstone provides a few token liberals, the word is generally used as a curse by the heroes.
** Just to give an example, almost every conversation between the liberal characters later in the books is an insane rant, all dedicated to taking away the rights of the people. And freely admitting it. This is NOT how liberals talk, Johnstone!
** Other conversations between Raines and liberals will either be one-sided rants countered by Raines' [[AuthorFilibuster calm, rational logic]] or he manages to convince his opponent of the rightness of the Rebels' ways.
* TheCavalry: Subverted; if Raines is in a hopeless situation, he either breaks out of it himself or gets captured and THEN breaks out of it himself.
* TheManIsKeepingUsDown: Why the Rebels fail in the first book.
* TheRadioDiesFirst: Corrie, the radio operator, seems to get shot in the back ridiculously often.
* ViolenceIsTheOnlyOption: The official Rebel position. Granted, the series takes place in a universe where, if you're not Rebel or Neutral, you're almost irredeemably evil, but still...
* WillTheyOrWontThey: Cooper and Jersey take this to an almost insane level.

Top