A E van Vogt - 2000-02-01

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F345.png A E van Vogt February 1, 2000, Steve Holland, The Guardian

When, in 1948, The World Of Null-A was published in book form, it was the first SF magazine serial to appear in hardcover from a major publisher (earlier titles had appeared from specialist houses). In France, it was translated by surrealist Boris Vian and created a market for science fiction.

However, van Vogt's interest in disciplines that would focus latent talent led him to dianetics, the memory auditing system developed by fellow SF writer L Ron Hubbard, which became the cornerstone of scientology. Although not interested in the mystical/religious aspects of scientology, van Vogt maintained the Los Angeles Hubbard Dianetic Centre from 1950 until 1961, partly financing the gesture by gathering together and reworking earlier stories into novels.

Wikipedia cite:
{{cite news | first = Steve | last = Holland | title = A E van Vogt | url = https://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,,131148,00.html | work = The Guardian | date = February 1, 2000 | accessdate = February 6, 2019 }}