John Munro (author)

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John F. Munro
Born1849
Bristol
Died(1930-12-19)December 19, 1930
Bishopston, Bristol, England
NationalityBritish
OccupationMechanical engineer, writer
Notable work
A Trip to Venus, Heroes of the Telegraph

John F. Munro (1849-1930) was a British professor of mechanical engineering at Bristol and author who wrote the science fiction stories A Trip to Venus (1897), Sun-Rise in the Moon (1894) and A Message from Mars (1895).[1] A Message from Mars was included as the first chapter of A Trip to Venus, and A Trip to Venus was included in Farewell Fantastic Venus by Brian Aldiss and Harry Harrison. Munro also wrote Heroes of the Telegraph (1891) and other historical and reference books, such as A pocket-book of electrical rules and tables for the use of electricians and engineers (1884)[citation needed]. Because they were published before 1925, most of Munro's works are in the public domain.

Works[]

Science fiction[]

Electricity and Technology[]

  • Electricity and Its Uses, 1887[citation needed]
  • The Wire and the Wave[citation needed]
  • Pioneers of Electricity, 1890[citation needed]
  • Heroes of the Telegraph, 1891[citation needed]
  • The Story of Electricity, 1902[citation needed]
  • Romance of Electricity, 1893[citation needed]
  • A pocket-book of electrical rules and tables for the use of electricians and engineers by John Munro and Andrew Jamieson, 1894[citation needed]

Other[]

  • The Story of the British race, 1909[3]
  • Lord Kelvin, G.C.V.O. (biography), 1902[4]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Authors : Munro, John : SFE : Science Fiction Encyclopedia". www.sf-encyclopedia.com.
  2. ^ A Trip to Venus. 2014-05-16. ISBN 978-1-63355-074-2.
  3. ^ Munro, John (July 22, 1899). The story of the British race: by John Munro. G. Newnes. OCLC 233701812 – via Open WorldCat.
  4. ^ Munro, John (July 22, 1902). Lord Kelvin, G.C.V.O. Henry J. Drane, Salisbury House. OCLC 34649687 – via Open WorldCat.

External links[]

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