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Informationen zum Autor Herbert George Wells was an influential English writer, best known for his works in science fiction, though his prolific output spanned various genres, including history, social commentary, politics, and autobiography. Born on September 21, 1866, in Bromley, London, Wells attended the Normal School of Science in London, where he studied biology under Thomas Henry Huxley. Wells initially worked as a teacher and journalist before turning to writing full time. Over his career, he penned more than fifty novels, along with numerous short stories and non-fiction works. His early works, such as "The Time Machine," "The War of the Worlds," and "The Invisible Man," helped establish him as one of the pioneers of modern science fiction. He also explored themes of social justice, the possibilities of science and technology, and the complexities of human nature in works like "The History of Mr. Polly" and "The Shape of Things to Come." Throughout his life, Wells engaged in political and philosophical discourse, influenced by thinkers like Mark Twain and Plato. He died on August 13, 1946, in London, leaving behind a legacy that shaped the development of speculative fiction and continued to inspire future generations of writers and thinkers. Klappentext Things to Come is the 1936 release of London Films, produced from the 1935 ""film story"" by H.G. Wells, the text of the present work. The book includes more than 100 illustrations, most of them publicity stills that are all the more relevant because Wells, for a script writer, had unusual control over the actual film production. The images are very much a direct expression of his film story. Done at age 70, Things to Come reflects on a long literary career, in both fiction and nonfiction, often given to the fate of man and the prospect of a unified world state, a utopian future realized in the film by A.D. 2036. That is what is coming: the end of warfare between belligerent nation states. Now the new frontier of human conquest is space, begun at film's end with the first firing of a gigantic space gun. Inhaltsverzeichnis Table of ContentsPreface Introduction 1. The Title 2. The Text 3. The Story 4. Future Perfect 5. Left and Right 6. Days to Come Things to Come (1935) (Annotated text of the London first edition) AppendicesI. The Things to Come Press Book, by Leon Stover II. "The Silliest Film: Will Machinery Make Robots of Men?" (1927), by H.G. Wells III. "The Land Ironclads" (1903), by H.G. Wells IV. "The Queer Story of Brownlow's Newspaper" (1932), by H.G. Wells Bibliography: Stover on Wells Index ...