Philip Francis Nowlan (1888–1940)
Autore di Armageddon 2419 A.D.
Sull'Autore
Serie
Opere di Philip Francis Nowlan
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: The Complete Newspaper Dailies, Volume 1 (1929-1930) (2008) 27 copie
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: The Complete Newspaper Dailies, Volume 6 (1936-1938) (1984) 22 copie
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: The Complete Newspaper Dailies, Volume 2 (1930-1932) (2009) 14 copie
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: The Complete Newspaper Dailies, Volume 3 (1932-1934) (2009) 9 copie
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: The Complete Newspaper Dailies, Volume 4 (1934-1935) (2010) 9 copie
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: The Complete Newspaper Dailies, Volume 5 (1936-1938) (2011) 8 copie
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: The Complete Newspaper Dailies, Volume 7 (1938-1940) (2013) 6 copie
Buck Rogers 25th Century A. D. (1971 Limited Edition of 1,000 Copies) Collectors Edition 1931-32 (1971) 5 copie
The Adventures of Buck Rogers With over 150 pictures suitable for Coloring (A Whitman Big Big Book) (1934) 2 copie
BUCK ROGERS 1 copia
Space Guards 1 copia
Buck Rogers 25th Century A.D. #5 1 copia
The Adventures of Buck Rogers 1 copia
Opere correlate
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Nome legale
- Nowlan, Philip Francis
- Altri nomi
- Nowlan, Phil
Phillips, Frank - Data di nascita
- 1888-11-13
- Data di morte
- 1940-02-01
- Sesso
- male
- Nazionalità
- USA
- Luogo di nascita
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
- Luogo di residenza
- Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania, USA
- Istruzione
- University of Pennsylvania
- Attività lavorative
- newspaper columnist
comic strip writer-artist
Utenti
Recensioni
Premi e riconoscimenti
Potrebbero anche piacerti
Autori correlati
Statistiche
- Opere
- 35
- Opere correlate
- 7
- Utenti
- 815
- Popolarità
- #31,299
- Voto
- 3.5
- Recensioni
- 15
- ISBN
- 88
- Lingue
- 4
It was really awful. The forgivably awful things were that it was
fairly dull; that a man who'd been asleep for 500 years could awake to
find himself a tactical military genius; and that the science was just
nonexistent. But those really just arise from it being a pulp I
guess. But, apart from all that, it was just amazingly racist.
The narrator gleefully annihilates the "Mongol Chinese" (known as the
Hans), who had conquered America, at every given opportunity - soldier
and civilian alike as "not even the terror could conceal the hate in
those faces".
Nowlan also transforms some North American placenames in an
offensively simplistic way - for example Nu-Yok, Bah-Flo, Si-kaga,
and, possibly the best, the "Nu-Yok-A-lan-a liner".
His racial theories go further than just the Mongol Chinese: "the
noble brown-skinned Caucasians of India, the sturdy Balkanites of
Southern Europe, or the simple, spiritual Blacks of Africa, today one
of the leading races of the world--although in the Twentieth Century
we regarded them as
inferior."
That last quote was from the final couple of pages, and he does
attempt some kind of reluctant climb down from his 200 page
hate-crime, speculating that the Hans "sprang from a genus of
human-like creatures that may have arrived on this earth with a small
planet (or large meteor) which is known to have crashed in interior
Asia late in the Twentieth Century". He probably could have left it
at that, but no: "The theory is that these creatures ... with a mental
super-development, but a vacuum in place of that intangible something
we call a soul, mated forcibly with the Tibetans". I don't know why
the Tibetans had to be dragged into all this.
Anyway, a far cry from the Gil Gerard series from my childhood. This should really be 1 star or less, but it is interesting as a cultural artifact. And, as Umberto Eco may have said, it's a good example of a bad book.
Still, cool covers.… (altro)