The Stolen Body

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""The Stolen Body"" (1927) is a science fiction short story by H. G. Wells that was originally published in Weird Tales magazine and was later reprinted in an anthology edited by Marvin Kaye.

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The story's main characters are a pair of casual paranormal researchers who are experimenting with the idea of astral projection. One night, one of them inadvertently succeeds in projecting his spirit from his body, which is then taken possession of by a malevolent entity in his absence. His partner receives a vivid sensation of him calling out for help and rushes to his residence, only to find him absent and the place in shambles. The researcher continues to search for his partner and learns that he has perpetrated a series of violent incidents around London. He seeks the aid of a medium, who channels his partner's spirit and finds that he has fallen down a well and subsequently been abandoned by the possessing entity. They locate the well and rescue him, after which he recounts the story of his possession.


H. G. Wells
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H. G. Wells
Books

Floor Games · Little Wars · A Modern Utopia · The New World Order · The Open Conspiracy · The Outline of History · Russia in the Shadows · The Science of Life · The Shape of Things to Come · The Stolen Bacillus and Other Incidents · Travels of a Republican Radical in Search of Hot Water · World Brain

Novels

Ann Veronica · The First Men in the Moon · The Food of the Gods and How It Came to Earth · The History of Mr. Polly · The Invisible Man · The Island of Dr Moreau · Kipps · Love and Mr Lewisham · Men Like Gods · The Sleeper Awakes · Star-Begotten · The Time Machine · Tono-Bungay · The War in the Air · The War of the Worlds · The Wheels of Chance · The World Set Free

Short Stories

The Chronic Argonauts · The Country of the Blind · The Crystal Egg · The Land Ironclads · The Man Who Could Work Miracles · The Red Room · The Stolen Body · A Story of the Days To Come · A Vision of Judgment

Works

The Man Who Could Work Miracles · Things to Come