H.G. Wells Home / HGW Biography / HGW Works / HGW Related Links
Date of Birth: |
September 21, 1866 |
Place of Birth: |
Bromley, Kent, England |
Spouses: |
Isabel, Amy Catherine (Jane) |
Most Famous Works: |
The Invisible Man, The Time Machine, War of the Worlds |
Children: |
George Philip, Frank Richard (sons of Jane), several illegitimate
children |
First Publication: |
Select Conversations With an Uncle, in 1895 |
Date of Death: |
August 13, 1946 |
Place of Death: |
London, England |
H(erbert) G(eorge) Wells was born on September 21,
H.G.'s career may have started entirely
by accident. When he was eight years old, he broke his leg and spent a lot of
time reading and discovered an intense interest in it. Also, he was enrolled in
the Thomas Morley's Academy at the age of eight. At the age of eleven, his
father fell from a ladder and fractured his thigh. Joseph Wells never fully
recovered and money was even tighter after this. So at the age of thirteen,
H.G. was withdrawn from the Thomas Morley's Academy and apprenticed to a
draper, for which he worked long hours. He hated it and was delighted when he
was dismissed from the draper's because of all the mistakes he had been making.
After this H.G. went to work for his uncle, as a part-time
tutor and a part-time student. However, this job was soon ended when
authorities closed down his uncle's school. After this he went through another
series of apprenticeships and finally won a scholarship to the
In 1891, Wells and Isabel, a daughter of one the Wells family's
in-laws- making her his cousin, were married. By this time he was working as a
tutor again. However, the marriage didn't last long, partly because of Well's
adultery, and in 1894, he left Isabel for Amy Catherine Robbins (nicknamed
Jane), a pupil in one of Well's classes. Jane and Wells were married not long
after Wells and Isabel's divorce.
In 1895, Wells' first major work was published- Select
Conversations With an Uncle. However, it was his
next book that started Wells on his road to success- The Time Machine,
which was also published in 1895. This was followed by The Island of Doctor
Moreau (which has been made into several different successful movies), in
1896, The Invisible Man, in 1897, and War of the Worlds, in
In 1902, Wells became actively involved with the Fabian Society, a influential club
of evolutionary socialists. He left the society in 1906 due to some arguments
with other members. Wells continued to write and in 1909 had an affair with
Amber Reeves, who had a daughter by him. Jane knew about this but they didn't
get divorced-they were married until her death in 1927. The public was shocked
and many of his works were boycotted. But it wouldn't be the first time-
starting in 1913 and lasting for ten years, Wells had
an affair with Rebecca West, also a writer. Rebecca also had a son by Wells.
Wells continued to write up until the year before his death. Some
of his other more famous works include The First Men in the Moon (1901),
Modern Utopia (1905), The Shape of Things to Come (1933), and Mind
at the End of Its Tether (1945). He died on August 13, 1946, only a few
weeks short of his eightieth birthday, from cancer. However, even today, his
works are still being read and made into movies. It was his War of the Worlds play that when broadcasted by Orson Welles in 1938,
convinced the public that it was real and threw
H.G. Wells Biography 29-10-08
http://library.thinkquest.org/27864/data/wells/hgwbio.html
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