Mr May prefers to concentrate on the bare facts, as they affected the development of the fiction.
Mr May is now a professor of computer science at Bristol University and chief technology officer at Xmos.
Mr May's book is the first comprehensive guide to the history and new findings of this change in emphasis.
The result, suggests Mr May, is that demography is more complex, if less dramatic, than it used to be.
"Her death has devastated her family back in South Korea, " said Mr May.
BBC: Daniel Jones jailed for killing ex-girlfriend Da In Lee
Mr May said police believed Jones had planned to flee to America, but confessed to his ex-partner about the killing and she then called police.
BBC: Daniel Jones jailed for killing ex-girlfriend Da In Lee
Mr May has also worked as a technical adviser for other start-ups, including Picochip, which is based in nearby Bath, a city famous for its Roman spa.
The Harper Asprey Wildlife Rescue Centre is supported by Queen's Brian May and runs on two sites, using land owned by Mr May, for long-term and specialist rehabilitation.
Neil Smith should remember that Mr May and Taylor actually wrote the music that was being performed and surely they would know much better than he how it should be performed.
The steamship company's current contract with the Royal Mail covers flights to Land's End, but not Newquay, but Mr May said discussions were taking place to see if that could be changed.
But as Mr May shows, much of the new demography stresses the variety of countries' experience and finds that huge changes are taking place between different age groups even when the overall size of a country is stable.
Falling fertility has taken much of the urgency out of the debate about population growth, at least among experts, since it seems to be solving the problem of excessive births (a view criticised by Mr May, who points out that even if fertility has declined, the momentum of change means populations will go on rising for a while).
Yet, almost against Mr May's better judgment, a sketchy profile of Grey's slightly unpleasant character emerges from these pages along with the suggestion that, by setting off over ocean or desert in search of his colourful and often improbable plots, he provided an example of adventurous derring-do that appealed irresistibly to the urban plumbers and mechanics for whom he knew he was writing.
At the end of May Mr Hatoyama may propose a modified version of the original plan.
Mr Djukanovic and his friends may win the election, but, in an awkward balance of power, Mr Bulatovic may remain federal prime minister while also leading Montenegro's biggest party.
Mr Clerides may accept Mr Denktash's demand for a rotating federal presidency: a Greek Cypriot one time, a Turkish Cypriot the next.
Mr Mitterrand may regard Mr Mabanckou as an exotic flower in France's literary garland, but the author is convinced that metropolitan France is no longer the centre of French literature.
In the meantime, the threat of possible criminal charges hanging over Mr Sharon may make Mr Bush wary of giving his open backing to the Israeli prime minister over the Gaza pull-out plan.
With Hamas's centre of gravity shifting back to Gaza via Cairo, Mr Haniyeh may be eyeing Mr Meshal's job.
Mr Murdoch may sympathise with Mr Redstone, for he too has had troubled relations with his relations especially those who at times he has hoped would succeed him.
From a wealthy Normandy family (a photograph of the family chateau unapologetically decorated his office wall in Brussels), Mr Lamy may not share Mr Delors's sentimental affection for the peasantry, but his political antennae are just as sharp.
This means that Mr Reid may not be able to count on Mr Nelson's vote for the final Senate bill, but others may compensate: Ms Snowe and Susan Collins, another Republican from Maine, both sided with most of the Democrats to defeat the amendment.
Mr Ashdown may know something about Mr Blair's plans that his party critics do not know.
Mr Blair may be fond of Mr Bush, but he can't wait to see the back of Donald Rumsfeld.
Mr Khatib may have feared that Mr Hitto's election would further distance the outside opposition leadership from what is going on inside Syria, our correspondent says.
Mr Blair may like and respect Mr Bush, but affection never prevented Margaret Thatcher showing her feelings when she thought that Ronald Reagan was acting against British interests.
But while invoking the memory of Mr Chavez may have been a good campaign strategy, working under his shadow may be risky for Mr Maduro in the long run, according to Mr Magdaleno.
BBC: How will Hugo Chavez's legacy impact Venezuela's polls?
But Mr Rutte may be open to inviting Mr Wilders to join a three-way government of the right.
Prosecutors may present more details of Mr Okubo's case in June, after which the options for Mr Ozawa may narrow.
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