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Chadwick, Philip George

Entry updated 28 October 2024. Tagged: Author.

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(1893-1955) UK author, an insurance broker's clerk at the time of World War One, in which he served. His only novel, The Death Guard (1939), was a Scientific Romance that made little impact at the time of publication: almost certainly most of the first edition was blitzed during the destruction of Paternoster Row around midnight 29-30 December 1940 in what came to be known as the Second Great Fire of London, and the book was therefore virtually forgotten until its 1992 reissue, glowingly introduced by Brian W Aldiss.

Its initial obscurity may also be explained not so much by its failure to anticipate the actual course of World War Two, but in its creation of a Near Future scenario unlikely to win readers in the midst of that conflict. The novel instead describes the development by a British scientist of the "Flesh Guard", a race of emotionless laboratory-created Androids designed to serve as soldiery; but after a squad of Guards goes berserk in Africa, the countries of Europe band together in a self-protective Invasion of England. This Future War soon becomes nightmarish: the Guards, which are indestructible, mutate (see Mutants) in the course of defending the homeland into grotesquely nightmarish unstoppable killing machines (see Berserkers). In 1970, Britain, still plagued by rogue Guards, continues to suffer under Fascist rule. The book, parts of which may have been drafted in the immediate aftermath of the Great War, contains several themes later developed by L Ron Hubbard and James Blish; though it is at times reminiscent of William Hope Hodgson, it also powerfully evokes the cultural pessimism of another dark vision composed at about the same time, Katharine Burdekin's Swastika Night (1937) as by Murray Constantine. [JE/SH/JC]

see also: Politics.

Philip George Chadwick

born Batley, Yorkshire: 17 August 1893

died Brighton, Sussex: 1955

works

  • The Death Guard (London: Hutchinson and Company, 1939) [in the publisher's First Novel Library series: hb/uncredited]
    • The Death Guard (London: Roc, 1992) [reprint of the above: introduction by Brian W Aldiss: pb/Peter Garriock]

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