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Christopher Priest (born 14 July 1943 in Cheadle, Greater Manchester) is a British novelist and science fiction writer. His works include ''Fugue for a Darkening Island'', ''Inverted World'', ''The Affirmation'', ''The Glamour'', ''The Prestige'' and ''The Separation''. Priest has been strongly influenced by the science fiction of H. G. Wells and in 2006 was appointed Vice-President of the international H. G. Wells Society. ==Works== Priest's first story, "The Run" was published in 1966. He became a full-time writer in 1968.〔http://www.locusmag.com/2006/Issues/06Priest.html〕 One of his early novels, ''The Affirmation'', concerns a traumatized man who apparently flips into a delusional world in which he experiences a lengthy voyage to an archipelago of exotic islands. This setting featured in many of Priest's short stories, which raises the question of whether the Dream Archipelago is actually a fantasy. The state of mind depicted in this novel is similar to that of the delusional fantasy-prone psychoanalytic patient ("Kirk Allen") in Robert Lindner's ''The Fifty-Minute Hour'', or Jack London's tortured prisoner in ''The Star Rover''. Priest also dealt with delusional alternate realities in ''A Dream of Wessex'', in which a group of experimenters for a British government project are brain-wired to a hypnosis machine and jointly participate in an imaginary but as-real-as-real future in a vacation island off the coast of a Sovietized Britain. His most recent novels are ''The Islanders'' (2011), set in the Dream Archipelago, and ''The Adjacent'' (2013), a multi-strand narrative with recurring characters. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Christopher Priest (novelist)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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