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HG Wells first imagined a uranium-based hand grenade that "would continue to explode indefinitely" in his 1914 novel The World Set Free. He even thought it would be dropped from planes.
Spielberg's contemporary spin on H. G. Wells would be up there with his best if only he could have nailed the ending.
Between November 1936 and November 1937, H.G. Wells gave a series of lectures in Great Britain, France, and the US about the world's impending problems and how to solve them.
HG Wells is often celebrated for his scientific prophecies, but what many don’t realize is how hard the prolific writer fought for his social predictions – many of which turned out to be ...
Claire Tomalin’s latest biography, “The Young H.G. Wells: Changing the World,” is plainly written, packed with incident and justly admiring without being uncritical. In comparison with, say ...
H. G. Wells has been referred to as the father of science fiction, and many of his novels and short stories have served as the inspiration for H.G. Wells movies, which popularized the genre.
EXCLUSIVE: UK-based sales firm 101 Films International has inked a raft of key deals on Fear the Invisible Man, a feature remake of the HG Wells novel The Invisible Man, from director Paul ...
H.G. Wells' Interview With Stalin Helped Change the Fundamental Principles of Liberalism. AFP/Getty Images. I doubt that any other interview of the last ten years was more dramatic, ...