Often hailed as the best French science fiction writer of the early 20th
century, Maurice Renard coined the term "Scientific Marvel Fiction" to
pen a series of gripping, ground-breaking stories that owe as much to
Edgar Allan Poe as they do to H.-G. Wells. Until now, Renard was best
known to the English-speaking public for his thrice-filmed thriller, The
Hands of Orlac. The Doctored Man, a collection of 14 stories written
between 1913 and 1939, features a man blinded during WWI who, through
the grafting of "electroscopic" eyes, can see into other dimensions, the
classic The Man Who Wanted To Be Invisible in which Renard exposes the
scientific fallacy inherent in Wells' famous novel, as well as other
ground-breaking tales of time-travel, prehistoric wing-men,
intangibility, robotic cars and interplanetary travel! This is the
fourth in a series of five volumes, translated and annotated by Brian
Stableford, devoted to presenting the classic works of this pioneering
giant of French science fiction.