Biblio
1931
"The Future of the Human Race". London: Royal Institution of Great Britain, 1931.
The Gas War of 1940. A Novel. Being an account of the world catastrophe as set down by Raymond Denning, the first Dictator of Great Britain. London: Eric Partridge at the Scholaris Press, 1931.
The Grand Mysterious Secret Marriage Temple. Manitowoc, WI: Np, 1931.
"The Hothouse World" In Argosy (New York). Vol. 219.1 - 6 ., 1931.
Hunger and Love. London: Putnam, 1931.
"If the General Strike Had Succeeded (Being Extracts from an Imaginary Newspaper June 1930)" In If It Had Happened Otherwise: Lapses into Imaginary History, Edited by Squire, J[ohn] C[ollings]. London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1931.
The Lost Children. London: Hutchinson, 1931.
Migrants of the Stars: Being an Account of the Discovery of the Marvelous Land of Niames, and of the Secret of its Inhabitants. New York: The Classic Press, 1931.
No Traveller Returns. London: White Owl Press, 1931.
Our Glorious Future. A Novel in Two Parts. The Miracle Child. The Battle of the Spirits. London: C.W. Daniel, 1931.
"Our World in Fifty Years' Time" In After Democracy: Addresses and Papers on the Present World Situation. London: Watts & Co., 1931.
Outward Ho!. London: Williams & Norgate, 1931.
The Richest Man on Earth. New York: Lowe Shearon, 1931.
"Service First" In Amazing Stories. Vol. 4.1 ., 1931.
The Seven Niches: A Legend. London: Cecil Palmer, 1931.
On the Shores of the Infinite. Vol. 312 pp. London/Norwich: :Simpkin Marshall/Jarrold & Sons., 1931.
Strange Hunger. London: Hamilton & Co, 1931.
"They Should Be Slaves". Ms.: Hocken Library, Dunedin, New Zealand, 1931.
"The Time Stream" In Wonder Stories . Vol. 3.7 - 10 ., 1931.
True Riches. Glendale, CA: Adrian R. Apple, 1931.
"Utopia" In The Tablet (London). Vol. 157., 1931.
A Woman's Utopia. London: Ernest Benn, 1931.
1932
Afternoons in Utopia: Tales of the New Time. London: John Lane, The Bodley Head, 1932.
The Allegion or New World Religion. Based upon a proposition affording a scientific fundament of thought as benevolently revolutionary as were the proposals of Copernicus and Galileo in Astronomy, or of Dr. Joseph Priestly in Chemistry. New York: Ptd. by William Edwin Rudge, 1932.
America Made Young: A Plan for a More Perfect Society. Philadelphia, PA: Humanities Publishing Co, 1932.