M. P. Shiel (1865-1947) was born in Montserrat in the West Indies.
At the age of fifteen he was crowned by his father 'King Felipe of
Redonda', Redonda being a rocky islet in the Caribbean. In 1885,
Shiel came to England and from 1895 onwards, he earned his living
through writing, specializing in wildly imaginative science fiction
with a sideline in detective novels. He had a tumultuous private
life, fathering several children by different women, and in 1914 he
was sentenced to sixteen months in Wormwood Scrubs for 'indecently
assaulting and carnally knowing' his partner's twelve-year-old
daughter. In his old age, he settled in a cottage in Sussex and
became increasingly preoccupied with religious themes. Shiel died
in 1947, and is today chiefly remembered for his novel The Purple
Cloud (1901).
John Sutherland is emeritus Lord Northcliffe Professor of Modern
English Literature at University College London. He has edited
numerous titles for Penguin Classics and is the author of many
works of literary criticism, biography and memoir.
Fantastic, weird, macabre...imaginative, fascinating, convincing,
as some dreadful nightmare...a remarkable piece of work...head and
shoulders above the average tale of fantastic adventure
*New York Times Book Review*
Delivered with a skill and artistry falling little short of actual
majesty
*H P Lovecraft*
The first great science fiction novel of the science fiction
century
*John Clute*
One of the best last-man books, The Purple Cloud still surprises
with its passionate despair and prescient scenes of mass
extinction, motorcars, electrified billboards and telephone sex by
undersea cable
*Times Literary Supplement*
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