John Hands (author)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born1945 (age 8081)
Lancashire, England
Occupation
  • Non-fiction author
  • novelist
  • and tutor
AlmamaterUniversity of London
Notable worksThe Future of Humankind 2023, Cosmosapiens 2015, Housing Co-operatives 1975
John Hands
Hands in 2022
Hands in 2022
Born1945 (age 8081)
Lancashire, England
Occupation
  • Non-fiction author
  • novelist
  • and tutor
Alma materUniversity of London
Notable worksThe Future of Humankind 2023, Cosmosapiens 2015, Housing Co-operatives 1975
Website
www.johnhands.com

John Hands is a British author who has been published in 12 countries. Trained as a scientist, he has written three novels, plus non-fiction books, most recently The Future of Humankind: Why We Should Be Optimistic, the sequel to Cosmosapiens: Human Evolution from the Origin of the Universe, which spans scientific disciplines from cosmology to neuroscience, and Housing Co-operatives.[1][2][3][4][5]

Hands was born near Rochdale in Lancashire, England, and read chemistry at Queen Mary College, University of London. He was elected president of the University of London Union, the first undergraduate to occupy that post.[6] He worked in cooperatives, including as founding director of the Government's Co-operative Housing Agency, and served on three Government committees.[7]

From 1987 to 1990, Hands tutored in physics as well as management studies for the Open University, and contributed features to national newspapers while also writing novels.

In 2001, he was appointed visiting lecturer in creative writing at the University of North London, and in 2004 Royal Literary Fund Fellow at University College London (UCL), a post he held for five years.[8]

Afterwards, he became an external tutor in the Graduate School for 10 years, giving 2-day interactive workshops showing students what they need to produce an effective PhD. These workshops were also given at other graduate schools in London.

Books

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI