![](/images/blank-book/blank-book.1920.jpg)
Parameter
Kategorien
Mehr zum Buch
From the twentieth century's first great practitioner of the novel of ideas comes a consummate masterpiece of science fiction about a man trapped in the terror of his own creation. A stranger emerges out of a freezing February day with a request for lodging in a cozy provincial inn. Who is this out-of-season traveler? More confounding is the thick mask of bandages obscuring his face. Why is he disguised in such a manner? What keeps him hidden in his room? The villagers, aroused by trepidation and curiosity, bring it upon themselves to find the answers. What they discover is not only a man trapped in the terror of his own creation, but a chilling reflection of the unsolvable mysteries of their own souls. -My fantastic stories do not pretend to deal with possible things. They aim indeed only at the same amount of conviction as one gets in a gripping good dream.---H. G. Wells With an Introduction by W. Warren Wagar and an Afterword by Scott Westerfeld
Buchkauf
invisible Man, H. G. Wells
- Sprache
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 2010
- product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
- (Paperback)
Lieferung
Zahlungsmethoden
Feedback senden
- Titel
- invisible Man
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Autor*innen
- H. G. Wells
- Verlag
- Penguin Books Ltd
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 2010
- Einband
- Paperback
- ISBN10
- 0451531671
- ISBN13
- 9780451531674
- Kategorie
- Sci-Fi und Fantasy
- Beschreibung
- From the twentieth century's first great practitioner of the novel of ideas comes a consummate masterpiece of science fiction about a man trapped in the terror of his own creation. A stranger emerges out of a freezing February day with a request for lodging in a cozy provincial inn. Who is this out-of-season traveler? More confounding is the thick mask of bandages obscuring his face. Why is he disguised in such a manner? What keeps him hidden in his room? The villagers, aroused by trepidation and curiosity, bring it upon themselves to find the answers. What they discover is not only a man trapped in the terror of his own creation, but a chilling reflection of the unsolvable mysteries of their own souls. -My fantastic stories do not pretend to deal with possible things. They aim indeed only at the same amount of conviction as one gets in a gripping good dream.---H. G. Wells With an Introduction by W. Warren Wagar and an Afterword by Scott Westerfeld