I certainly read Jules Verne at the prep school. They had a quite decent library; although it was such a barbaric place, the library was good and I could always escape to the library, and so in a way the more barbaric it was, the better the library seemed to be. And so I read a lot of Jules Verne there, and they had a good encyclopaedia there which was actually a wonderful source of knowledge. I remember in the encyclopaedia there I learned about electrons and protons. They had an article about electrons and protons, and I was very frustrated because it turned out... I mean, they had this long article all about electrons and protons they told us everything about electrons and nothing about protons, and I decided right then that I should find out more about protons. I mean it was clear that in fact at that time almost nothing was known about protons, so that was clearly the way to go. So that came very early, that feeling that there was something unknown; that electrons were really to a great extent done and protons clearly were not. Which, of course, was true at that time. So that library had in it, certainly Jules Verne and probably - I don't know whether they had Wells, but certainly I discovered Wells pretty soon afterwards and I read the classic Wells books, Tono-Bungay and The Time Machine and The Island of Doctor Moreau, all these marvelous books which are great as literature as well as being...
[Q] imaginative
Well, rather mediocre science. I mean Wells was a far greater writer than he was a scientist.