âAn English Man Looks At The Worldâ represents a twenty six piece collection of essays of varying length from acclaimed British author H.G. Wells. The collection of journalistic pieces written in the years before the First World War represent the authors move away from writing novels to journalism. There are opinion pieces such as the "So-Called Science of Sociology" which argues sociology can never be a science because at its core it is deceitful and overlooks the truly important matter, the uniqueness of individuals. The collection offers personal looks in to Wellsâ life, as he recounts his "First Flight", which is perfect reading for any true fans of the sci-fi great.
H.G Wells (1866-1946) is known as âThe father of Science Fictionâ, for the profound impact he has had on the genre. In his time he predicted aircraft, tanks, nuclear weapons space travel and even the world wide web. Forever forward looking, he devoted his talents to a progressive vision on a global scale. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in literature on four occasions, and as such maintains a central role in the canon of British and world-wide literature. Some of his best work includes the time travel novel âThe Time Machineâ, the sci-fi adventure âThe Island of Dr. Moreauâ , and âThe War of the Worldsâ, which was adapted in to a film starring Tom Cruise.