About the Author The English novelist John Wyndham Parkes Lucas Beynon Harris (1903-69) wrote
 his finest work under the pseudonym John Wyndham, though he had at least
 seven others, all permutations of his lengthy name. Raised in Edgbaston,
 Birmingham, he attended a number of English prep schools and began writing as
 a sideline, while trying to make a career variously in law, farming,
 commercial art and advertising. He began publishing stories in the early
 1930s, many in American magazines, but he did not find his voice as the
 writer John Wyndham until he returned from service in World War II.

 The world had changed, and it was now gripped by the possibility of a nuclear
 apocalypse. Wyndham was fascinated by apocalyptic scenarios, and his 1951
 novel The Day of the Triffids transformed him as a writer. His distinctive
 approach to fantasy is often classified as science fiction, though its
 popularity far exceeds the genre. Following the publication of The Day of
 the Triffids in 1951, Wyndham wrote a series of remarkable novels that
 include The Kraken Wakes (1953), The Chrysalids (1955), The Midwich Cuckoos
 (1957), The Trouble with Lichen (1960) and Chocky (1968) as well as the short
 story collections Jizzle (1954), Tales of Gooseflesh and Laughter (1956), The
 Seeds of Time (1956) and Consider Her Countless Ways and Others (1961).

 Wyndham also wrote under a number of other pseudonyms, and several titles
 were released under his name after his death in March of 1969. He remains
 best known for the timeless terror of The Day of the Triffids and The Midwich
 Cuckoos, the latter inspiring two memorable film versions titled Village of
 the Damned.


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