
author
Known for the thought-provoking story "The Man Who Evolved," this early science-fiction writer combined scientific curiosity with a knack for unsettling ideas. Though little is widely recorded about his life, his work remains a memorable example of pulp-era speculative fiction.
Scott Hemphill is remembered today mainly for "The Man Who Evolved," a science-fiction story that has stayed in circulation through public-domain and audiobook projects. The tale stands out for its mix of big scientific ideas and eerie imagination, qualities that helped it endure beyond the magazine era in which it first appeared.
Available public sources about Hemphill himself are limited. LibriVox notes that he was a student at the California Institute of Technology and that he calculated pi to one million digits, a detail that fits the mathematically minded spirit readers often associate with his fiction.
That small surviving record gives him a certain mystery, but it also adds to his appeal. He remains one of those lesser-known authors whose reputation rests on a single striking work that still sparks curiosity in modern science-fiction readers.