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James Patrick Hogan (27 June 1941 – 12 July 2010) was a British science fiction author. [1] His major works include the Giants series of five novels published between 1977 and 2005. Biography
James Reginald Hogan, AO, FRAeS is an Australian airline executive. Between 2006 and mid-2017, he was the President and CEO of Etihad Airways , one of the national airlines of the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
Inherit the Stars, the first entry in the series (and Hogan's first novel) was essentially a scientific mystery, with no antagonist or conflict as such.Instead, it followed a group of researchers who found themselves faced with a seemingly insuperable paradox: the discovery that an advanced human civilization had flourished in the Solar System fifty thousand years ago, despite having left no ...
James Humphries Hogan (1883–1948), English stained glass designer James P. Hogan (director) (1890–1943), American filmmaker James P. Hogan (writer) (1941–2010), British science fiction author
Thrice Upon A Time is a science fiction novel by British writer James P. Hogan, first published in 1980.Unlike most other time travel stories, Thrice Upon A Time considers the ramifications of sending messages into the past and/or receiving messages from the future, rather than the sending of physical objects through time.
James Hogan (16 October 1898 – 24 October 1963) was an Irish revolutionary, historian, and political scientist. Educated at Clongowes Wood College and University College Dublin, Hogan joined the Dublin Brigade of the Irish Volunteers in 1915 and later fought in the War of Irish Independence while also becoming a figure in the academic world, securing a chair of history at University College ...
Hogan discussed the background of the novel in his essay "Discovering Hyperspace". [1] While developing the setting for Inherit the Stars, Hogan found himself dissatisfied with the use of superluminal travel in science fiction as a plot device, in particular finding that he could not think of a story where the invention of the hyperdrive is central to the plot.
James Patrick Hogan (commonly referred to as simply James Hogan) (September 21, 1890 in Lowell, Massachusetts – November 4, 1943 in North Hollywood, California) was an American filmmaker. The films Hogan directed include Bulldog Drummond's Secret Police (1939) and The Mad Ghoul (1943), his last film. [ 1 ]