Year of Prophesying

H.G. WELLS

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Year of Prophesying

"DO MEN AND WOMEN GENERALLY WANT A BETTER WORLD THAN THIS?": H.G. WELLS’ A YEAR OF PROPHESYING, INSCRIBED BY WELLS TO HIS FRIEND AND SCIENTIFIC CONSULTANT SIR RICHARD GREGORY

WELLS, H.G. A Year of Prophesying. London: T. Fisher Unwin, (1924). Octavo, original blue cloth.

First edition, second printing, of this collection of Wells' syndicated newspaper column from 1923-24, inscribed by Wells on the half title, "R.A.G.S. with love from H.G." Presented to and from the collection of Wells’ close friend and frequent scientific adviser, Sir Richard Arman Gregory.

"Of the 55 articles in this volume 54 were written weekly from Sept. 1923 to Sept. 1924 for the McClure Newspaper Syndicate and printed in newspapers throughout the English-speaking world; in London by The Westminster Gazette. The remaining one, "The Future of British Empire," appeared in The Empire Review" (Wells). Without scarce original dust jacket. Hammond E24. Wells 88. Wells Society Bibliography 93. Inscribed to noted British scientist and Wells' lifelong friend Sir Richard Arman Gregory. In Wells' first work of fiction, he dedicated the work to Gregory as his "dearest friend." The two met while students at the Normal School of Science in South Kensington. They jointly authored a textbook, Honours Physiography, in 1891. Reportedly, Gregory was the one person with whom Wells never quarreled. A professor of astronomy, Gregory also possessed expertise in physics, chemistry and other disciplines; he wrote several textbooks and eventually assumed the editorship of the journal Nature, to which Wells frequently contributed. The author often turned to Gregory, and to the experts Gregory contacted on Wells' behalf, for insight and encouragement when writing his famous "scientific romances." After Wells' death, Gregory worked to establish the H.G. Wells Memorial to preserve public attention to his friend's body of work. Throughout his life Gregory was a passionate advocate for science—"It is necessary to believe in the holiness of scientific work," he once declared—and "an optimist about man's future" (Horrabin, in New Scientist, April 11, 1957).

A bit of foxing to preliminaries, just a touch of rubbing to spine ends and corners. An exceptionally good association copy, scarce and desirable with Wells' presentation inscription.

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