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What Might Have Been: The Story of a Social War

English

By (author): Ernest Bramah

It is 1907 in the Collateral Age in Britain. There is mixed flying above the promenade in Hastings. The telescribe flashes messages instantly to its subscribers, and a recent naval battle has been won by an Englishman's daring. But civil war is brewing, between the Conservative party of decent tradition and the Labour government inflicting a socialist nightmare on British society. Daily life is about to change in this Edwardian speculative fiction of the near future, and it will not be for the better. What Might Have Been: The Story of a Social War (1907) is Ernest Bramah's long-forgotten novel of Conservative resistance to Labour rule. It has long been celebrated for its vision of a futuristic society and politics, but was quickly bowdlerised of its more savage political satire, and republished in 1909 as The Secret of the League. Bramah mixed hard-hitting social realism and intricate office espionage with riotous political satire, and accurately predicted the invention of the fax machine and the ascendancy of Labour politics. What Might Have Been is a political thriller packed with high adventure, on the roads with a nail-biting Buchanesque car chase, at sea in a battle that C S Forrester could have written, and in the air with dramatic rescue missions. Now, for the first time since 1907, What Might Have Been is available at its original length, with 7000 words restored to recreate this lost landmark in British speculative fiction. The critical introduction by Jeremy Hawthorn sets out thenovel's history, its themes and its connections with Bramah's more famous literary works, The Wallet of Kai Lung, and Max Carrados. See more
Current price €14.88
Original price €17.50
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Product Details
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Handheld Press
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781999828004

About Ernest Bramah

Ernest Bramah was born Ernest Brammah Smith in Hulme Manchester on 20 March 1868 and was educated at Manchester Grammar School. He died on 23 June 1942 in Weston-Super-Mare. He was a professional writer but was notoriously secretive about his life. Today he is chiefly remembered for his celebrated stories about Kai Lung from 1900 and his short stories about the blind detective Max Carrados from 1914. Jeremy Hawthorn (author of the Introduction) is a retired professor of English who lives in Trondheim Norway. He has written articles and books on Joseph Conrad Virginia Woolf and literary theory. His textbook Studying the Novel (Bloomsbury Academic) is now in its seventh edition and his The Reader as Peeping Tom (Ohio State University Press) was published in 2014.

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