H(erbert)
G(eorge) Wells (1866-1946) |
English novelist,
journalist, sociologist, and historian, whose science fiction stories have
been filmed many times. H.G. Wells's
best known works are THE TIME MACHINE (1895), one of the first modern science
fiction stories, THE INVISIBLE MAN (1897), and THE WAR OF THE WORLDS (1898).
Wells wrote over a hundred of books, about fifty of them novels. "No one would have believed, in the last years
of the nineteenth century, that human affairs were being watched keenly and
closely by intelligences greater than man's and yet as mortal as his own;
that as men busied themselves about their affairs they were scrutinized and
studied, perhaps almost as narrowly as a man with a microscope might
scrutinize the transient creatures that swarm and multiply in a drop of
water." (from War of the Worlds) Along with George
Orwell's Nineteen-Eighty-Four
and Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, which was a pessimistic answer to
scientific optimism, Wells's novels are among the
classics of science-fiction. Later Wells's romantic
and enthusiastic conception of technology turned more doubtful. His bitter
side is seen early in the novel BOON (1915), which was a parody of Henry
James. Herbert George Wells
was born in In 1883 Wells became a teacher/pupil at From 1893 Wells devoted
himself entirely to writing. As a novelist Wells made his debut with The
Time Machine, a parody of English class division. The narrator is Hillyer, who discusses with his friends about theories of
time travel. A week later their host has an incredible story to tell - he has returned from the year
802701. The Time Traveler had found two people: the
Eloi, weak and little, who live above ground in a
seemingly Edenic paradise, and the Morlocks, bestial creatures that live below ground, who
eat the Eloi. The Traveler's
beautiful friend Weena is killed, he flees into the
far future, where he encounters "crab-like creatures" and things
"like a huge white butterfly", that have taken over the planet. In
the year 30,000,000 he finds lichens, blood-red sea and a creature with
tentacles. He returns horrified back to the present. Much of the realistic
atmosphere of the story was achieved by carefully studied technical details.
The basic principles of the machine contained materials regarding time as the
fourth dimension - years later Albert Einstein published his theory of the
four dimensional continuum of space-time. The Time Machine was followed by THE
ISLAND OF DR. MOREAU (1896), in which a mad scientist transforms animals into
human creatures. The story is told in flashback by a man named Prendick. He travels with a biologist to a remote island,
which is controlled by Dr. Moreau. In his laboratory he experiments with
animals, and has created Beast People. Moreau is killed by Puma-Woman. Prendick escapes from the island, and returns to The Invisible Man was a Faustian story
of a scientist who has tampered with nature in pursuit of superhuman powers,
and The War of the Worlds, a novel of an invasion of Martians. The story
appeared at a time when Giovanni Schiaparelli's discovery of Martian
"canals" and Percival Lowell's book Mars (1895) stirred
speculations that there could be life on the Red Planet. The narrator is an
unnamed "philosophical writer" who tells about events that happened
six years earlier. Martian cylinders land on earth outside Cecil B. DeMille bought the rights of the novel in Dissatisfied with his
literary work, Wells moved into the novel genre with LOVE AND MR. LEWISHAM
(1900). Kipps strengthened his reputation as
a serous writer. Wells also published critical pamphlets attacking the
Victorian social order, among them ANTICIPATIONS (1901), MANKIND IN THE
MAKING (1903), and A MODERN UTOPIA (1905). In THE HISTORY OF MR. POLLY (1909)
Wells returned to vanished Passionate concern for
society led Wells to join in 1903 the socialist Fabian
Society in Wells soon quarreled with the society's leaders, among them George Bernard
Shaw. This
experience was basis for his novel THE NEW MACHIAVELLI (1911), which
portrayed the noted Fabians. At the outbreak of war in 1914, Wells left his
lover, Elizabeth Von Arnim, and began a love affair
with a young journalist, Rebecca West, 26 years his junior.
West and Wells called themselves "panther" and "jaguar".
Their son Anthony West later wrote about their difficult relationship in Aspects
of a Life (1984). In his novels Wells used
his two wives, Amber Reeves, Rebecca West, Odette Keun
and all the passing mistresses as models for his characters. ''I was never a
great amorist,'' Wells wrote in EXPERIMENT IN AUTOBIOGRAPHY (1934) ''though I
have loved several people very deeply.'' Rebecca West became a famous author
and married a wealthy banker, Henry Andrews, who had business interests in "Nothing could have been more obvious to the
people of the early twentieth century than the rapidity with which war was
becoming impossible. And as certainly they did not see it. They did not see
it until the atomic bombs burst in their fumbling hands." (from
The World Set Free, 1914) After WW I Wells
published several non-fiction works, among them THE OUTLINE OF HISTORY
(1920), THE SCIENCE OF LIFE (1929-39), written in collaboration with Sir
Julian Huxley and George Philip Wells, and EXPERIMENT IN AUTOBIOGRAPHY
(1934). At this time Wells had gained the status as a popular celebrity, and
he continued to write prolifically. In 1917 he was a member of Research
Committee for the Although Wells had
many reservations about the Soviet system, he understood the broad aims of
the Russian Revolution, and had in Orson Welles' Mercury Theater radio broadcast, based on The War of the
Worlds, caused a panic in the "Those who have not read The War of the
Worlds may be surprised to find that, like much of Wells's
writing, it is full of poetry and contains passages that catch the throat.
Wells tried to pretend that he was not an artist and stated that "there
will come a time for every work of art when it will have served its purpose
and be bereft of its last rag of significance." This has not yet
happened for the best of Wells's science fiction,
though it has done so for all but a few of his realistic and political
novels." (Arthur
C. Clarke in Greetings, Carbon-Based Bipeds!, 1999) Wells lived through
World War II in his house on Regent's Park, refusing to let the blitz drive
him out of For further reading: The Invisible
Man: The Life and Liberties of H.G. Wells by Michael Coren (1993); A Critical Edition of The War of the
Worlds, ed. by David Y. Hughes and Harry M. Geduld
(1993); H.G. Wells: Six Scientific Romances Adapted for Film by Thomas
C. Renzi (1992); H.G. Wells by Brian Murray
(1990); H.G. Wells under Revision, ed. by Patrick Parrinder
and Christopher Rolfe (1990); H.G. Wells by Brian Murray (1990); H.G.
Wells: A Comprehensive Bibliography, published by the H.G. Wells Society
(1986); The Time Traveller: Life of H.G. Wells by Norman and Jean
Mackenzie (1973); H.G. Wells: The Critical Heritage, ed. by P. Parrinder (1972); H.G. Wells by L. Dickson (1969);
The Early H.G. Wells by Bernard Bergonzi (1961); A Companion to Mr. Wells's "Outline of History," by Hilaire Belloc (1926); The World of H.G. Wells by
Van Wyck Brooks (1915) - See also: Jules Verne, Edgar Rice Burroughs |
H.G. Wells 28-10-08
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