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/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=3637 Arendt, Hannah. Men in Dark Times. 1968.

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/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=3650 Duffy, Carol Ann. Mean Time. 1993.

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/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=3709 Howard, Elizabeth Jane. Marking Time. 1991.

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/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=5081 Auden, W. H.. For the Time Being. 1944.

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/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=6301 Matheson, Richard. Bid Time Return. 1975.

See our profile of Richard Matheson.

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/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=6343 Vonnegut, Kurt. Between Time and Timbuktu. 1973.

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/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=6565 Auden, W. H.. Another Time. 1940.

Another Time (February 1940) is a collection of poems by W. H. Auden, containing some of his most admired shorter poems. It was Auden’s third such collection, and the first since his emigration to New York in January 1939; accordingly, it was published initially in the USA, two weeks prior to Auden’s 33rd birthday, before a British edition appeared five months later in June 1940. In this transatlantic volume, just under half the poems had been composed in America in 1939, and just over half written in the Old World, mostly in England and Belgium in an especially fertile phase, 1937-8, although a small number date from 1935-6. This was also Auden’s most substantial verse collection to date, offering fifty-one poems, a dozen of them newly published, the remainder having appeared in magazines such as New Writing and The Listener in Britain and the New Yorker in the USA. Another Time does not gather all of Auden’s notable short

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/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=6763 Williams, Hugo. All the Time in the World. 1966.

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/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=7192 Powell, Anthony. A Dance to the Music of Time. 1951.

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/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=7937 Wells, H. G.. The Time Machine. 1895.

H. G. Wells's The Time Machine: An Invention is one of the earliest works of English Literature to be set in the distant future, and the first to use technology to transport its hero there. Wells began and then abandoned an earlier and very different version of the novel, published in the Science Schools Journal in 1888, entitled “The Chronic Argonauts”. The Time Machine was published by Heinemann in May 1895 after having being serialised in a rather different form in the National Observer from March to June 1894 (cut short by the journal's change of editor) and in the New Review from January to May 1895. The romance (the term that Wells himself preferred for his scientific fantasy stories) begins within a frame-narrative. The Time Traveller is expounding to an audience, composed of the text's unnamed narrator and other dinner-party guests who are named in such terms as “the Medical Man” and “the Provincial Mayor”, his

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