The Missing Angel Erle Cox |
|
Author:
| Erle Cox, Erle |
ISBN: | 979-8-8471-1159-1 |
Publication Date: | Aug 2022 |
Publisher: | Independently Published
|
Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $10.99 |
Book Description:
|
Erle Cox (15 August 1873 - 20 November 1950) was an Australian journalist and science fiction writer.
Three early works were published in the Lone Hand Magazine: Reprieve, Diplomacy and The Social Code.
- Out of the Silence, his best known novel, is set in Australia, and involves the discovery of a gigantic, buried sphere, containing the accumulated knowledge of a past civilization. It was published by The Argus in...
More Description
Erle Cox (15 August 1873 - 20 November 1950) was an Australian journalist and science fiction writer.
Three early works were published in the Lone Hand Magazine: Reprieve, Diplomacy and The Social Code.
- Out of the Silence, his best known novel, is set in Australia, and involves the discovery of a gigantic, buried sphere, containing the accumulated knowledge of a past civilization. It was published by The Argus in weekly instalments over a six-month period in 1919. The first Australian edition in book form was published by Vidler, in 1925. The same year a British edition appeared (Hamilton), and in 1928 an American edition (Rae D. Henkle). In 1934, the book was adapted to a comic-strip format by an artist identified only as Hix, likely Reginald Ernest Hicks.[2] This pictorial version was published daily in The Argus in 120 episodes from August to December. In the same year, the novel was dramatised for radio presentation as a 25-part serial. The SF Encyclopedia notes that: "The novel exhibits some racist overtones"[3] in reference to the eugenically inspired character Odi, who brought about the supremacy of a white race by devising a ray that killed only black people. The SF Encyclopedia does not, however, reveal that this was a small historical reminiscence of a figure in the deep historical past, and that the reader of the novel is told that Odi "was judged and condemned as the greatest criminal our world had ever produced." The device of a buried sphere from a lost, advanced civilization clearly influenced René Barjavel's best-settling 1966 French science fiction novel La Nuit des temps, translated into English as The Ice People (1971).
- Fools Harvest was published as a fourteen-part serial in The Argus, in 1938, and was published in book form the following year by Robertson Mullen with two extra chapters.
- The Missing Angel, the third and final book by Cox, was published by Robertson Mullen in 1947.