
John Wade (2) (1945–)
Author of London Curiosities: The Capital's Odd & Obscure, Weird and Wonderful Places
For other authors named John Wade, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
John Wade began his journalistic career on local newspapers, where he worked his way from junior reporter to deputy editor He was editor of the UK magazine Photography for seven years before becoming a freelance writer and photographer thirty years ago. He has written and illustrated numerous show more articles on camera history for photographic and collectors' magazines in the UK, America and Australia. He has also written articles on social history for magazines in the UK, and has written, edited and contributed to more than thirty books, published in the UK and US, including The Ingenious Victorians (Pen Sword, 2016). show less
Works by John Wade
London Curiosities: The Capital's Odd & Obscure, Weird and Wonderful Places (2017) 43 copies, 1 review
The Golden Age of Science Fiction: A Journey into Space with 1950s Radio, TV, Films, Comics and Books (2019) 24 copies
The Ingenious Victorians: Weird and Wonderful Ideas from the Age of Innovation (2016) 24 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
Members
Reviews
Short and interesting chapters on Victorian innovations, though I was expecting more surprises and eccentricity in the selection of topics. There were a few things that captured my attention, like the enormous globe housed in its very own building, and which people could go inside to explore a detailed model of the Earth's geography, rather than standing on the outside and only seeing half the sphere at one time. That was fascinating!
But many of the other chapters were about innovations that show more are well established and not quite as likely to capture the imagination. Not that they're not worth writing about. It's just that with a subtitle that promises "weird and wonderful," it didn't always go there. show less
But many of the other chapters were about innovations that show more are well established and not quite as likely to capture the imagination. Not that they're not worth writing about. It's just that with a subtitle that promises "weird and wonderful," it didn't always go there. show less
Having lived in London for four years, I enjoyed learning the history behind so many London landmarks.
Statistics
- Works
- 20
- Members
- 177
- Popularity
- #121,426
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 67
- Languages
- 5

