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Bert Smallways, young, naïve and full of impractical ideas, finds himself accidentally hijacked from his bucolic small village in the south of England into the heart of an apocalyptic World War. A prophetic future-history by the great sage of modern science fiction, which paints an all-too-familiar portrait of a world gone mad, and its devastating effects on every inhabitant.

Produktbeschreibung
Bert Smallways, young, naïve and full of impractical ideas, finds himself accidentally hijacked from his bucolic small village in the south of England into the heart of an apocalyptic World War. A prophetic future-history by the great sage of modern science fiction, which paints an all-too-familiar portrait of a world gone mad, and its devastating effects on every inhabitant.
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Autorenporträt
Herbert George Wells is called the Father of Science Fiction because of his groundbreaking works in establishing the genre. His most influential pieces include The Time Machine, The War of the Worlds, The Invisible Man, and The Island of Doctor Moreau. The youngest of four children, Wells was born in Kent, England in 1866 to former domestic servants. He became enamored with reading in his childhood while mending a broken leg. During his failed early career paths he still read extensively from the house library where his mother had returned to working as a servant. He became a teacher at Midhurst Grammar school and later won a scholarship to study science at what became the Royal College of Science in London. He joined the Debating Society there and developed an interest in philosophers and the reformation of society-specifically, the concept of socialism. He wrote for the school journal and published his first serialized fiction story soon after, a precursor to The Time Machine. A prolific writer, Wells dabbled in nearly every genre, but is best known for his science fiction, and is credited with predicting the invention of tanks, nuclear weaponry, aircraft, and even the nebulous concept of the internet. He was a four-time nominee for the Nobel Prize in Literature. He died at the age of 79 in his home at Regent's Park on August 13, 1946.