About 1891 Singer returned to England and settled in Yorkshire, as did Berens.
The Story of My Dictatorship (1893) Singer and Berens jointly wrote
The Story Of My Dictatorship (1893), a novel advocating tax reform. This was described as a "utopian novel clearly indicating Georgist influence", and sold more than 100,000 copies. The magazine
The Dial said of this work that it "offers to the physicist greatly varied interest. Seldom does one find propositions more clearly enunciated or more concisely and logically discussed. Their exhaustive analysis holds attention and forces conclusions as to many of the terms and conventions of modern science, some of which have claimed the highest prerogative..." The magazine
The New Age was reported to have "devoted seven columns of not altogether unfavourable criticism" to the book, claiming "That it propounds a new theory of heat, light, magnetism and electricity". The work also received an extensive review in the magazine
Popular Science for October 1897, which regarded it as "a brave attempt to solve" the "riddle of the universe". According to this account, the book proposed the four fundamental physical principles of "persistence, resistance, reciprocity, and equalization". It addressed the "forbidden problem" of
gravitation, asserting that the gravitational force between two bodies depended not only on their mass and the distance between them (as for the Newtonian description) but also in differences in the "state of excitation" of the bodies. A less favourable review in the magazine
Knowledge (1 April 1898) condemned the book as "bristling with mistaken ideas". ==Australia and New Zealand 1898–1902==