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  • Published: 4 November 2021
  • ISBN: 9780241995525
  • Imprint: Penguin Audio
  • Format: Audio Download

The Young H.G. Wells

Changing the World




A fascinating journey into the early life of H.G. Wells, the father of science fiction, from one of Britain's best biographers

How did the first forty years of H. G. Wells' life shape the father of science fiction?
From his impoverished childhood in a working-class English family, to his determination to educate himself at any cost, to the serious ill health that dominated his twenties and thirties, his complicated marriages, and love affair with socialism, the first forty years of H. G. Wells' extraordinary life would set him on a path to become one of the world's most influential writers. The sudden success of The Time Machine and The War of The Worlds transformed his life and catapulted him to international fame; he became the writer who most inspired Orwell and countless others, and predicted men walking on the moon seventy years before it happened.
In this remarkable, empathetic biography, Claire Tomalin paints a fascinating portrait of a man like no other, driven by curiosity and desiring reform, a socialist and a futurist whose new and imaginative worlds continue to inspire today.

  • Published: 4 November 2021
  • ISBN: 9780241995525
  • Imprint: Penguin Audio
  • Format: Audio Download

About the author

Claire Tomalin

Claire Tomalin was born in London in 1933 of a French father and an English mother, and was educated at Newnham College, Cambridge. She has worked in publishing and journalism all her life, becoming literary editor first of the New Statesman and then of the Sunday Times, which she left in 1986.

She is also the author of The Life and Death of Mary Wollstonecraft, which won the Whitbread First Book Prize for 1974; Shelley and His World (reissued by Penguin in 1992); Katherine Mansfield: A Secret Life (Penguin 1988), a biography of the modernist writer on whom she also based her 1991 play The Winter Wife; the highly-acclaimed The Invisible Woman: The Story of Nelly Ternan and Charles Dickens (Penguin 1991), which won the NCR Book Award for 1991, as well as the Hawthornden Prize and the 1990 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Biography; and Mrs Jordan's Profession (Penguin 1995), a study of the Regency actress. Other books written for Penguin are: Jane Austen: A Life and a collection of memoirs entitled Several Strangers.

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Praise for The Young H.G. Wells

'Another triumph for a biographer who goes from strength to strength

Melvyn Bragg

You put down Tomalin's book knowing you have met a living author

The Times

'A moving story, and Tomalin tells it vividly, with as great a fund of sympathy and sense, as can be imagined'

Daily Telegraph on Samuel Pepys: An Unequalled Self

One of the best biographers of her generation

Guardian

Tomalin knows how to tell a cracking story

Daily Mail

A most intelligent and sympathetic biographer... she writes well and wittily

Daily Telegraph