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B.N.N.

COLLEGE BHIWANDI

ACADEMIC YEAR 2015-16

PROJECT SUBJECT
Characteristics of Diaspora and a
novel by Diaspora writer and discuss
identities ,culture ,migration and man women
relationship in it.

NAME : Anusha Vighnesh Masuna.


CLASS : M.A. Part 2 (SEM IV)
SUBJECT : Literature of Indian Diaspora
ROLL NO : --

Guidance Teacher
Prof. Mhalunkar sir.
Acknowledgment
I express my sincere gratitude to the University of
Mumbai for such an opportunity. I am thankful to Dr. S. R.
Mhalunkar my subject teacher for guiding me meticulously
from time to time
Especially a thanks to and Prof.B. K. Paikrao
Dr. S. V. Nikam Sir for their co-operation and help. I am also
thankful to the department of English for their timely help and
guidance
I extend my thanks to the staff of Markandeya library
and collage library for their kind co-operation.
The acknowledge would be incomplete if I do not
express my sincere gratitude to my friends who helped me in
completing and giving me a confidence to complete this project
report. Finally, I am thankful to the members of my family and
everyone who helped in completing this project report.

Anusha Vighnesh Masuna.


Sr.no Particular name Remark

1 Introduction of Author- The Invisible Man

2 Introduction of other character

3 Summary

4 Theme of Novel

5 Conclusion

6 Bibliography
The Invisible Man
The Invisible Man

First edition cover

Author H.G. Wells

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Genre Horror, Science fiction novel

Published 1897 (C. Arthur Pearson)

Media type Print (hardback & paperback)

Pages 149

ISBN NA
Information of the Invisible
Man

Information of The Invisible Man is a science fiction novella by H. G. Wells


published in 1897. Originally serialized in Pearson's Weekly in 1897, it was
published as a novel the same year. The Invisible Man of the title is Griffin, a
scientist who has devoted himself to research into optics and invents a way to
change a body's refractive index to that of air so that it absorbs and reflects no
light and thus becomes invisible. He successfully carries out this procedure on
himself, but fails in his attempt to reverse the procedure.

While its predecessors, The Time Machine and The Island of Doctor Moreau, were
written using first-person narrators, Wells adopts a third-person objective point of
view in The Invisible Man.

He demands to be left alone and spends most of his time in his rooms working
with a set of chemicals and laboratory apparatus, only venturing out at night.
While staying at the inn, hundreds of strange glass bottles arrive that Griffin calls
his luggage. Many local townspeople believe this to be very strange. He becomes
the talk of the village (one of the novel's most charming aspects is its portrayal of
small-town life in southern England, which the author knew from first-hand
experience).

Meanwhile, a mysterious burglary occurs in the village. Griffin has run out of
money and was trying to find a way to pay for his board and lodging. When
his landlady demands he pay his bill and quit the premises, he reveals part of
his invisibility to her in a fit of pique. An attempt to apprehend the stranger is
frustrated when he undresses to take advantage of his invisibility, fights off his
would-be captors, and flees to the downs.
Plot

A mysterious man, Griffin, arrives at the local inn of the English village of Iping, West Sussex,
during a snowstorm. The stranger wears a long-sleeved, thick coat and gloves, his face hidden
entirely by bandages except for a fake pink nose, and a wide-brimmed hat. He is excessively
reclusive, irascible, and unfriendly.

He demands to be left alone and spends most of his time in his rooms working with a set of
chemicals and laboratory apparatus, only venturing out at night. While staying at the inn,
hundreds of strange glass bottles arrive that Griffin calls his luggage. Many local townspeople
believe this to be very strange. He becomes the talk of the village (one of the novel's most
charming aspects is its portrayal of small-town life in southern England, which the author knew
from first-hand experience).

Meanwhile, a mysterious burglary occurs in the village. Griffin has run out of money and was
trying to find a way to pay for his board and lodging. When his landlady demands he pay his bill
and quit the premises, he reveals part of his invisibility to her in a fit of pique. An attempt to
apprehend the stranger is frustrated when he undresses to take advantage of his invisibility, fights
off his would-be captors, and flees to the downs.

There Griffin coerces a tramp, Thomas Marvel, into becoming his assistant. With Marvel, he
returns to the village to recover three notebooks that contain records of his experiments. When
Marvel attempts to betray the Invisible Man to police, Griffin chases him to the seaside town of
Port Burdock, threatening to kill him. Marvel escapes to a local inn and is saved by the people at
the inn, but Griffin escapes. Marvel later goes to the police and tells them of this "invisible man,"
then requests to be locked up in a high security jail.
Summary

Griffin's furious attempt to avenge his betrayal leads to his being shot. He takes shelter in a
nearby house that turns out to belong to Dr. Kemp, a former acquaintance from medical school.
To Kemp, he reveals his true identity: the Invisible Man is Griffin, a former medical student who
left medicine to devote himself to optics. Griffin recounts how he invented medicine capable of
rendering bodies invisible and, on impulse, performed the procedure on himself.

Griffin tells Kemp of the story of how he became invisible. He explains how he tried the
invisibility on a cat, then himself. Griffin burns down the boarding house he was staying in
along with all his equipment he used to turn invisible to cover his tracks, but soon realises he is
ill-equipped to survive in the open.

He attempts to steal food and clothes from a large department store, and eventually steals some
clothing from a theatrical supply shop and heads to Iping to attempt to reverse the invisibility.
But now he imagines that he can make Kemp his secret confederate, describing his plan to
begin a "Reign of Terror" by using his invisibility to terrorise the nation.

Kemp has already denounced Griffin to the local authorities and is waiting for help to arrive as he
listens to this wild proposal. When the authorities arrive at Kemp's house, Griffin fights his way out
and the next day leaves a note announcing that Kemp himself will be the first man to be killed in the
"Reign of Terror". Kemp, a cool-headed character, tries to organise a plan to use himself as bait to
trap the Invisible Man, but a note he sends is stolen from his servant by Griffin.

Griffin shoots and injures a local policeman who comes to Kemp's aid, then breaks into
Kemp's house. Kemp bolts for the town, where the local citizenry comes to his aid. Griffin is
seized, assaulted, and killed by a mob. The Invisible Man's naked, battered body gradually
becomes visible as he dies. A local policeman shouts to cover his face with a sheet, then the
book concludes.

In the final chapter, it is revealed that Marvel has secretly kept Griffin's notes.
Characters

1. Griffin

Main article: Griffin (The Invisible Man)

Griffin is the surname of the story's protagonist. His name is not mentioned until about halfway
through the book. Consumed with his greed for power and fame, he is the model of science
without humanity. A gifted young student, he becomes interested in the science of refraction.
During his experiments he accidentally discovers formulas that would make tissue invisible.
Obsessed with his discovery, he tries the experiment on himself and becomes invisible. However
he does not discover how to reverse the process and slowly discovers that the advantages of
being invisible outweighed the disadvantages and the problems he faced. Thus begins his
downfall as he takes the road to crime for his survival, revealing in the process his lack of
conscience, inhumanity and complete selfishness. He progresses from obsession to fanaticism, to
insanity and finally to his fateful end.

2. Dr. Kemp

Dr. Kemp is a scientist living in the town of Port Burdock. He is a former acquaintance of
Griffin, who knew Kemp to be interested in strange, bizarre aspects of science. Kemp continues
to study science as he hopes to be admitted to The Royal Society. His scientific temperament
makes him listen to the story Griffin tells him. He does not become hysterical nor does he
behave like the locals. Griffin hopes Kemp would support him in his evil schemes and help him
live a normal life. But Kemp is too decent to join him. He is repelled by Griffin's brutality and
considers him insane and homicidal. He betrays Griffin to the police. He keeps his cool
throughout the plot, when the final hunt for Griffin begins. Kemp helps in the final capture and
killing of Griffin.

In the 1933 Universal film adaptation, Kemp is given the first name Arthur and is played by
William Harrigan. Unlike the novel, Kemp in the film does not survive to the end of the story.

3. Janny Hall

Janny Hall is the wife of Mr. Hall and the owner of the Coach and Horses Inn. A very friendly,
down-to-earth woman who enjoys socialising with her guests, Mrs. Hall is continually
frustrated by the mysterious Griffin's refusal to talk with her, and his repeated temper tantrums.
Mrs. Hall appears in the 1933 Universal film adaptation, where she was played by
Una O'Connor.

4. George Hall

George Hall is the husband of Mrs. Hall and helps her run the Coach and Horses Inn. He was
the first person in Iping to suspect that the mysterious Griffin is invisible: when a dog bites
him and tears his glove, Griffin retreats to his room and Hall follows to see if he is all right,
only to see Griffin without his glove and handless (or so it appears to Hall).

Mr. Hall appears in the 1933 Universal film adaptation, where his first name is changed to
Herbert and seriously injured by Griffin. In the film, he is portrayed by Forrester Harvey.

5. Thomas Marvel

Thomas Marvel is a droll tramp unwittingly recruited to assist the Invisible Man as his first
visible partner. He carries the Invisible Man's scientific notebooks and stolen money. Eventually
Marvel grows afraid of his unseen partner and flees to Port Burdock, taking both the notebooks
and the money with him, where he seeks police protection. Although the Invisible Man is furious
and vows revenge, he becomes preoccupied with hiding from the law and retaliating against Dr.
Kemp, and Marvel is spared. Marvel eventually uses the stolen money to open his own inn,
which he calls the Invisible Man, and prospers. The novel ends with him secretly "marvelling" at
Griffin's notes. It turns out Marvel kept the notes and only views them when there is nobody
around so nobody can know Griffin's secrets — or that Marvel has them.

Marvel does not appear in the 1933 film adaptation, but does appear in Alan Moore's comics
series The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.

6. Col. Adye

Col. Adye is the chief of police in the town of Port Burdock. He is called upon by Dr. Kemp
when the Invisible Man turns up in Kemp's house. Adye saves Kemp from the Invisible Man's
first attempt on his life and leads the hunt for the unseen fugitive. He mostly follows Kemp's
suggestions in planning the campaign against the Invisible Man. He is eventually shot by the
Invisible Man with Kemp's revolver. Upon being shot, Adye is described as falling down and not
getting back up. However, he is mentioned in the epilogue as being one of those who had
questioned Thomas Marvel about the whereabouts of the Invisible Man's notebooks, and is
never made clear whether this occurred prior to his being shot, or if it occurred afterwards and
Adye survived.

7. Dr. Cuss

Dr. Cuss is a doctor living in the village of Iping. Intrigued by tales of a bandaged stranger staying
at the Coach and Horses Inn, Dr. Cuss goes to see him under the pretence of asking for a donation to
the nurse's fund. Cuss is scared away after Griffin pinches his nose with an invisible hand. Cuss
immediately goes to see the Rev. Bunting, who, not surprisingly, does not believe the
doctor's wild story. Later, Cuss and Bunting obtain the Invisible Man's notebooks, but these are
subsequently stolen back from them by the invisible Griffin, when he also takes both men's
clothes.

8. J.A. Jaffers

J.A. Jaffers is a constable in the town of Iping. He is called upon by George Hall and Janny
Hall to arrest Griffin after they suspect him of robbing the Reverend Bunting. He overcomes his
shock at the discovery that Griffin was invisible quickly, determined to arrest him in spite of this.
The Invisible Man knocks him unconscious in his flight from Iping.

Jaffers appears in the 1933 Universal film adaptation.


Adaptations
Films and TV series The, a 1933 film directed by James Whale and produced by Universal
Pictures. Griffin was played by Claude Rains and given the first name "Jack". One of the
Universal horror films of the 1930s, and it spawned a number of sequels, plus many spin offs
using the idea of an "invisible man" that were largely unrelated to Wells's original story and
using a relative of Griffin as a secondary character possessing the invisibility formula. These
were; The Invisible Man Returns (1940) with Vincent Price as Geoffrey Radcliffe, the film's
Invisible Man; The Invisible Woman (1940) with Virginia Bruce as the title character and John
Barrymore as the scientist who invents the invisibility process; Invisible Agent (1942) and The
Invisible Man's Revenge (1944) both starring Jon Hall (as different Invisible Men); and Abbott
and Costello Meet the Invisible Man (1951) with Arthur Franz as Tommy Nelson, a boxer
framed for murder who takes the invisibility formula to find the real killer and clear his name.
Vincent Price also provided the voice of the Invisible Man at the conclusion of Abbott and
Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948).

• The Invisible Man, a 1958 TV series that ran for two seasons and centred on
espionage. Created by Ralph Smart.
• The Amazing Transparent Man, a 1960 science fiction/crime thriller about an
invisible safecracker.
• Mad Monster Party (1967) included the Invisible Man (voiced by Allen Swift) as part of
the monster ensemble.
• The Invisible Man (1975) featured a sympathetic main character who used his abilities
for good. As with The Six Million Dollar Man before it, the pilot was dark in tone, but the
regular series that followed was lighter. Doctor Daniel Westin (David McCallum)
accidentally renders himself invisible in a lab accident, while working for the sinister
KLAE corporation.
• Gemini Man, a 1976 TV series using a "DNA Stabilizer" to allow Agent Sam Casey brief
periods of invisibility.
• The Invisible Woman, a 1983 TV-movie pilot for a comedy series starring Alexa
Hamilton.
• Человек-невидимка (Pronunciation: Chelovek-nevidimka; translation: The Invisible
Man), a 1984 Soviet movie directed by Aleksandr Zakharov, with Andrei Kharitonov as
Griffin. The plot was changed: Griffin was shown as a scientist talented but not
understood by his contemporaries, and Kemp (starring Romualdas Ramanauskas) as a
vicious person who wanted to become a ruler of the world with Griffin's help. When
Griffin rejected Kemp's proposal, the latter did all his best to kill him (and finally
succeeded). The movie remained unknown to the Western audience because of a
violation of Wells's copyright.[citation needed]
• The Invisible Man, a 1984 television adaptation in six parts, shown on BBC 1.
• Amazon Women on the Moon, a 1987 comedy anthology film featured a spoof titled
Son of the Invisible Man, with Ed Begley, Jr. playing the son of the original Invisible
Man who believes he is invisible, but is in fact visible – creating an awkward situation
when he confidently disrobes in front of everyone.
• Memoirs of an Invisible Man, a 1992 modernized version of the story, starring Chevy
Chase as a man who is accidentally made invisible and is then hunted by a
government agent who wishes to use him as a weapon.
• Hollow Man, a 2000 film starring Kevin Bacon, and directed by Paul Verhoeven;
this film spawned a 2006 direct-to-video sequel Hollow Man 2 starring Christian
Slater as "Michael Griffin" and directed by Claudio Fah.
• The Invisible Man, a Sci-Fi Channel television series aired from 2000 to 2002, lasting
two seasons. It revolves around Darien Fawkes (Vincent Ventresca), a burglar who gets
arrested and goes to jail, eventually negotiating his freedom to serve as a guinea pig to a
government secret project run by his scientist brother Kevin through "The Agency", a
low-budget US department. After being submitted to a surgical procedure to have a
synthetic gland implanted in his cerebral cortex, he is able to secrete a substance called
"Quicksilver", which coats his skin, hair, nails and clothes and renders him invisible.
However, the gland is sabotaged to leak Quicksilver into the host's brain, creating the
"Quicksilver Madness", a state in which the host becomes mentally unstable (and
consequently more violent and dangerous). The series was somewhat more successful
than the original 1975 series, but was cancelled due to cost issues and internal bickering
between Sci-Fi and Universal.
• The Invisible Man (2011) an ongoing animated television series produced by Moonscoop
which is loosely based in the book.
• A feature film entitled The Invisible Man is currently in development. It will be the
second film in the Universal Horror Revival series of remakes, following 2010's
The Wolfman.
• In the 2013 film The Book Thief the protagonist, a girl growing up in Nazi Germany,
saves a copy of "The Invisible Man" from a Nazi book burning and on several scenes
reads parts of it aloud. H. G. Wells was an author on the banned authors list during Nazi
Germany.

Stage

• Ken Hill adapted the book to play form in 1991, and it debuted at Theatre Royal
Stratford East in 1991. It played in the West End in 1993 with Michael N. Harbour as
Griffin. In November 2010, the play was revived at the Menier Theatre in London
running until February 2011.

RadioThe 2001 Radio Tales drama "The Invisible Man" is an adaptation of the novel
for National Public Radio.[1]

• In 2009 New York Public Radio's The Jerome L. Greene Performance Space premiered
"The Invisible Man" a multimedia audio play written by Arthur Yorinks. The play takes
place during one evening in a contemporary New York City homeless shelter and in its
minimalist fashion, speaks to not only the timely subject of homelessness and
• (Octob

abandonment, but to the timeless and tragic existential human condition of invisibility. A
collage of sound, live voices and sound effects was joined by a never-before-heard
original piano score composed and improvised by Michael Riesman, director of the
Philip Glass Ensemble, in a rare live musical performance. Lighting, video and
conceptual design were by Mark Stanley, resident lighting designer for The New York
City Ballet. Arthur Yorinks directed.

In other media
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(July 2013)
Cover of Classics Illustrated issue 153

• The character of the Invisible Man, given a full name of "Hawley Griffin", appears in the
graphic novel The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen by Alan Moore. In the film
adaptation, he is replaced with a different character named "Rodney Skinner", and
instead of being the inventor of the formula, he is a thief who stole the formula. The film
novelisation reveals that the inventor was Hawley Griffin. Skinner was especially created
for the film because of copyright issues regarding the 1933 Universal film.
• A character in the television series Sanctuary was named Griffin. He was one of the Five,
a team of scientists who injected themselves with a blood serum and gained special
abilities. His ability was to make himself transparent at will.

• In 2009, Canadian cartoonist Jeff Lemire released an Original Graphic Novel for DC
Comics/Vertigo titled "The Nobody". This story was inspired by The Invisible Man with
"John Griffen" as "The Invisible Man". There are many other allusions to the book.

• In 2008, the creative team of Doug Moench and Kelley Jones created a limited series
called Batman: The Unseen. It features Batman fighting against the Invisible Man.

• The famous cartoon series Tom & Jerry produced an episode in 1947 called The
Invisible Mouse, parodying the book written by Wells.

• The Invisible Man is Monster in My Pocket No. 46. In the comic book series, he was
allied with the good monsters. In the animated special, he was rechristened Dr. Henry
Davenport and became leader of the good monsters.

• Castlevania often has enemies and bosses that refer to old literature and films. In
Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin, The Invisible Man makes an appearance as an enemy that
dwells in the sewers. His clothes (before he discards them to stalk players unseen)
reference those in the novel The Invisible Man: he wears a long, thick, tall-collared
coat, gloves, and a wide-brimmed hat. He also dies in a similar fashion.

• In the book The Wright 3 by Blue Balliett, the Invisible Man played an important role in
the story.

• In the one-shot comic Van Helsing: From Beneath The Rue Morgue, which presents Van
Helsing and Dr. Moreau, there is a monster created by Dr. Moreau that is invisible. Van
Helsing finds the papers of this invisibility cure and remembers something about an
Englishman who turned invisible in West Sussex.

• In the 1970s, the Invisible Man appeared as a mascot in television commercials


for Scotch Magic Transparent Tape.

• In Queen B Productions December 2003 issue of the Elvira Mistress of The Dark comic,
an invisible woman appears in the second story "Mallville", a "Smallville" parody, as
one of the "Miss Mallville" beauty contest contestants. She's only seen by facial features,
her bikini, and sunglasses.

• The British rock band Queen released a song called "The Invisible Man" as one of
their singles from their 1989 album The Miracle.

• Another British rock band called Marillion also has a song called The Invisible Man.
This track opens the album Marbles, released in 2004.
• In the anime series Naruto, the Second Tsuchikage, Muu, is probably based on Griffin,
the main character of "The Invisible Man" due to his combination of bandage-covering
appearance and the invisibility technique he uses to avoid being spotted.

• In the Monster High media, including video games and web animations, there is a
teacher named "Mr. Where", who dresses in the Invisible Man's bandages, trench coat,
and gloves (however, he usually wears a beret and sunglasses as he is the drama teacher).
Plot Analysis
Initial Situation

Stranger in a Strange Land

The novel opens when a stranger arrives at Iping and no one knows what to make of him. From
the very beginning we know that there's some weirdness here, but we're not quite sure
what. (Unless, of course, we've seen the title of the book we're reading. Oh well.)

Conflict

Stranger vs. Village

The stranger doesn't fit in well in Iping and everyone's pretty suspicious of him. This makes it
tough for him to just live his invisible life. Starting with a robbery and ending with the Invisible
Man revealing himself, there is constant discord.

Complication

Marvel: He's No Robin


At first, the conflict is just between the Invisible Man and the village of Iping (at least, as far as
we know). Soon, though, the Invisible Man brings Thomas Marvel in as his accomplice, which
just complicates things. It causes more trouble in town, and also leads to bigger problems for the
Invisible Man, since Marvel doesn't want to help him. So now, the Invisible Man is fighting the
villagers and his ex-accomplice. Complicated, indeed.

Climax

The Back Story


In a weird way, the climax of the story takes place in the past. It's all about the Invisible Man's
development of his invisibility formula. It includes him stealing from his father, burning down
his boardinghouse, almost being caught by the Salvation Army, breaking out of the department
store, and realizing that being invisible isn't so great. This is also the section where we finally
learn the Invisible Man's name. So, if this story is a mystery about the stranger, we
finally unravel the mystery here.

Suspense
Who Will Prevail?
After Griffin invents the invisibility formula and finds Kemp, it seems like everything will go
okay. (Well, okay for Griffin – not for everyone else whom he plans to murder and terrorize.) But
when Dr. Kemp betrays the Invisible Man, the IM tries to murder Kemp in response. Now it's
Invisible Man vs. the world. The battle has begun, and we can't wait to see how it ends.
Denouement

The Not-So-Invisible Corpse


Spoiler alert: the world wins. The Invisible Man gets killed by some workmen and slowly but
surely, Griffin becomes visible again. This is the big reveal of the book, though it reveals info we
already knew.

The End

The End – Or Is It?


After Griffin dies, Marvel still has his scientific notes, but since they're totally in code, he can't
really put them to use. Maybe whoever inherits those notes will be able to recreate the formula or
some other scientific miracle. It's both a closed conclusion – because Griffin is dead – and an
open conclusion – because who knows what Griffin's notes might lead to next.
Conclusion
The invisible man has no positive or constructive relationships completely because of his
temperament. The only person who is nice to him was Mrs. Hall (innkeeper), though that is
because she is getting paid during lean period, who can't help but develop hostility towards him
during the later part of his stay in Iping.
Marvel is a character whose motives and statements are always suspicious. After a while he
grows tired of the invisible man and looks for ways to abandon him, at which he is unsuccessful
for the invisible man finds Marvel indispensable and threatens to kill him if he leaves. He does
not figure much in the novel though his deeds do come to light in the epilogue (which Wells
added only later in the American version). Turns out, Marvel has stolen the money but gets to
keep it because the lawyers can't prove whose money it is. He is successful in duping the
invisible man which invites a whole lot of the invisible man's fury, once again exhibiting his
hostile nature. Marvel can't exactly be described as cunning or manipulative, only lucky.
Dr. Kemp is a man of ideals and morals. He cares nothing for Griffin but sees him only as a
fugitive responsible for great destruction and disturbance. Dr. Kemp turns particularly inhuman
towards Griffin in contemplating his capture. Dr. Kemp is someone whom Griffin trusts to assist
him with his plans but Kemp just goes on to assist the police to arrest and punish Griffin.

H. G. Wells has a way with words and I really enjoyed his turn of phrase. Phrases like “the
inhuman bludgeoning of all tentative advances of curiosity (p. 19),”violently firing out its
humanity (p. 33)” and “The Anglo-Saxon genius for parliamentary government asserted itself;
there was a great deal of talk and no decisive action (p. 28).” And he uses the word
“hobbledehoy” which had the Downton Abbey fangirl in me grinning. But the story itself moved
at a snail pace

The science behind the invisibility was pretty interesting. It was based on the idea that our world
is an illusion of light. I thought that was a fascinating way to look at the world.

I found the main character interesting if not likable. He’s an anti-hero. I’m pretty sure his
antagonist was all the stupid people in the whole world. He was kind of arrogant. Obviously he
learns the bad things about invisibility. I was surprised about the little things that he struggles
with, though. I could tell a lot of thought went into what it would really be like. For example,
the fact that he can’t sleep because his eyelids are invisible. The crappy thing about being
invisible is that it’s easy to get things, but hard to enjoy them. And you get kind of lonely. H. G.
Wells did have a good point that the only really good use for invisibility is murder.
Bibliography-
1. Written by: griffin the invisible man, Series: Broadview Editions, 1st Edition

2. The Science of Fiction and the Fiction of Science: Collected Essays on SF Storytelling
and the Gnostic Imagination. McFarland. 2009.

3. "Philip Holt- H.G. Wells and the Ring of Gyges


Thank
you

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