The Star, H. G. Wells
The Star, H. G. Wells
List: $1.99 | Sale: $1.40
Club: $0.99

The Star
The Fire in the Sky: Humanity’s Moment of Truth

Author: H. G. Wells

Narrator: Scott Miller

Unabridged: 33 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Scott Miller

Published: 05/07/2024


Synopsis

Bud Gregory wants only three things: to avoid trouble, avoid effort, and avoid work. As he wanders the highways with his family and a barely functional car, strange events follow him—cars perform impossible feats, accidents refuse to happen, and small wagers turn into uncanny victories. Meanwhile, the United States faces a silent, paralyzing threat. An unnamed foreign power pushes the world toward catastrophe without firing a shot. As cities empty and panic spreads, one government scientist realizes the nation’s survival may depend on the last man anyone would choose.Murray Leinster blends roadside Americana with global tension in a story where brilliance hides behind laziness. The science feels effortless, the danger feels real, and the humor is dry and human. Nothing unfolds the way authority expects it to.Murray Leinster was one of the foundational voices of modern science fiction. Writing across multiple decades, he helped define both hard science fiction and character-driven speculative storytelling. His work shaped the genre long before it had formal rules.Best known for combining rigorous ideas with everyday people, Leinster influenced generations of writers. His stories often ask what happens when extraordinary power falls into the most ordinary hands.

About H. G. Wells

Herbert George Wells, better known as H. G. Wells, was a novelist, journalist, sociologist, and historian who wrote over 100 books. His novels are among the classic works of science fiction. His works, which go beyond ordinary adventure stories, are thought-provoking, forcing the reader to examine the future of mankind.

Wells was born in Bromley, Kent, in 1866. His father was a shopkeeper and a professional cricketer until he broke his leg. Wells studied biology at the Normal School of Science in London and later taught in several private schools. In 1893, he became a full-time writer. He married one of his brightest students, Amy Catherine, in 1895.

Wells earned his reputation with a string of science fiction novels, including The Time Machine, The Island of Dr. Moreau, and The Invisible Man. In 1938, his realistic portrayal of a martian invasion in The War of the Worlds caused a panic across the United States when it was performed as a radio broadcast by actor Orson Wells. His science fiction stories have since become some of the most filmed works of all time.

Between the two world wars, Wells lived mainly in France. Beyond his literary career, he was the president of an international peace organization (PEN) from 1934 to 1946. In this capacity, he had discussions with both Stalin and Roosevelt, trying to recruit them to his world-saving schemes. However, he later became disillusioned with the cause of peace when global war broke out for the second time in a generation. Throughout the Second World War, Wells lived in his house on Regent's Park, refusing to let the blitz drive him out of London. He died there on August 13, 1946.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Fabian

The love story doesn't even come close to the plot the novel tries to be, namely "Gone With the Wind." (To her credit, Ferber's novel is ten years older...) No. This is really much like GWTW-lite. It is, in fact, a weirdly paced paint-it-by-numbers type endevour. The love story is inauthentic & spor......more

Goodreads review by Patty

This book took me away from a difficult childhood and helped me escape into the world of books. It was a large and involved three generation, post civil war story of a strong, rigid Parhenia Hawks whose husband wanted to purchase a showboat and involved their children in the world of theatre. She wa......more

Goodreads review by Emily

You know that seminal story from your childhood? The one you watched/read/listened to so often that your parents were ready to bribe you out of doing so again in order to save their own sanity? For me, that story was Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein's Show Boat. Specifically, a tape-recording of Sh......more

Goodreads review by Marty

My wife and I have stumbled across a delightful little tradition. Each summer we go to one of the shows in the Utah Festival Opera & Musical. Whichever one we end up going to, my wife learns the piano sheet music to one of the songs and I read the literature it was based on--mine is in an effort to......more

Goodreads review by Suanne

Did you know that the notes in the refrain of “Cotton Blossom” are the inverted notes of the refrain of “Old Man River.” Go ahead, sing it in your head: Cot-ton Blossom……Old Man River. See? Now good luck getting that out of your head. We’re speaking, of course, of the musical Show Boat, which was bas......more