Bertram John Boland (12 February 1913 – 9 November 1976) was an English novelist and science fiction author.
Boland was born in
Birmingham, but later lived in
East Sussex, on the edge of
Ashdown Forest with his wife, Philippa.[1]
His most well known book was The League of Gentlemen (1958) which was released as a
film. However, characters' names and the ending were changed.[2] He wrote two sequels:
The Gentlemen Reform (1961)
The Gentlemen at Large (1962)
They continued with the characterisations developed in the film.
His first novel "White August" (1955) was a science fiction weather control disaster story. His second, "No Refuge" (1956) begins as a bank robbery crime story but them changes into science fiction, depicting a futuristic lost world.[3] In this world children get much of their education from computers and adults walk around with a small device on their chest, listening to music through earpieces.[4]