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The War of the Worlds

by H. G. Wells

First Published

2009

Subjects

Imaginary wars and battles
Juvenile fiction
Space warfare
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Fiction
Diseases
Martians
Invasions
Classic Literature
Open Library Staff Picks
open_syllabus_project
English Science fiction
Imaginary wars and battles in literature
Mars (Planet)
Science fiction
Space vehicles
Earth
Romance Ingles
Fiction, science fiction, general
British and irish fiction (fictional works by one author)
Fiction, fantasy, general
Children's fiction
Examinations
Vocabulary
SAT (Educational test)
English language
Study guides
Fiction, action & adventure
Life on other planets
War stories
Extraterrestrial beings, fiction
Outer space, fiction
Literature
English literature
Seres extraterrestres
Extraterrestrial beings
Ficcion
Guerra espacial
Fiction, science fiction, action & adventure
Human-alien encounters
Comic books, strips
Wells, h. g. (herbert george), 1866-1946
Adaptations
Graphic novels
Aladdin (legendary character), fiction
War, fiction
Adventure and adventurers, fiction
Guerras imaginarias
Novela
Guerra
Life on other planets, fiction
Fiction, war & military
Imaginary wars and battles -- Fiction
Space warfare -- Fiction
Mars (Planet) -- Fiction
Imaginary wars and battles--fiction
Space warfare--fiction
Pr5774 .w3 2005dx
823.912

Description

The ultimate science fiction classic: for more than one hundred years, this compelling tale of the Martian invasion of Earth has enthralled readers with a combination of imagination and incisive commentary on the imbalance of power that continues to be relevant today. The style is revolutionary for its era, employing a sophisticated first and third person account of the events which is both personal and focused on the holistic downfall of Earth's society. The Martians, as evil, mechanical and unknown a threat they are, remain daunting in today's society, where, despite technology's mammoth advances, humanity's hegemony over Earth is yet to be called into question. In Well's introduction to the book, where the character discusses with the later deceased Ogilvy about astronomy and the possibility of alien life defeating the 'savage' (to them) nineteenth-century Britain, is he insinuating that this is the truth and fate of humanity? It's up to you to decide…

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