The Rift is a novel by author Walter Jon Williams. Published in 1999, it is a 726 page (hardbound) epic concerning the effects of a massive earthquake in Missouri, Mississippi, and Louisiana. Largely using the 1811-12[1] New Madrid earthquake as a base, he depicts the breakdown of infrastructure that would result if an earthquake of equal magnitude were to occur today.
The title of the novel is a double-entendre. It is a reference to the theory that the New Madrid quake was the result of a failed rifting of North America, but also to the deep racial and social divides that are portrayed throughout the story.
Borrowing elements from Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, and E.L. Doctorow's Ragtime, it primarily follows the story of a white teenager and an African-American man on their journey down the devastated Mississippi River.
Although the focus of the novel is the journey of the two main characters, there are dozens of side-stories and parallel plot lines throughout the book. Some of which are: a preacher who leads his flock to believe that the end has come, a Sheriff (and KKK member) who begins a program of genocide against the people left homeless by the disaster, a technician struggling to keep a Louisiana nuclear power plant from melting down, and an Army Corps of Engineers commander trying to curtail the devastation wrought by the failure of the levee system.
The author also plays on actual historical events and personalities such as Huey Long, the uprising at the Sobibor concentration camp, and the Jonestown incident.
The novel is considered speculative fiction as it offers an explanation for the "New Madrid 'quake" that is but one of many proffered scientific theories. The Rift asks the classic "What if?" question (what if the quake of 1811 had occurred today) and attempts to answer it, addressing more the human issues surrounding the social breakdown than the earthquake itself.