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When the Sleeper Wakes

When the Sleeper Wakes

List Price: $49.95
Your Price: $49.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Terrible Awakening
Review: Another of Wells' dark futuristic visions, this novel is about a man who falls into a deep sleep in the Victorian age and wakes up early in the 22nd century. Wells predicts much of the technology that would be invented in the 20th century. This story is not just a fascinating read but a poignant social commentary.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A 1898 prediction of what life will be in the 22nd Century
Review: Before the Wright Bros. flew the first plane, H.G. Wells wrote this novel of Graham, who falls into a deep coma in 19th Century England and who wakes to find himself in the year 2100. Of course the book is filled with futurist innovations, including radio, T.V. and the VCR. Planes are there too, but wildly inaccurate--technologically they're not even up to the level of World War I. And there are other missteps: a base-12 counting system. But what is stunning is the accuracy of the socio-economic predictions of Wells. He lived in a time when the common man was striving for economic equality with the elite. But he predicts a back sliding, so that there is a huge schism between the haves and have-nots. It is this schism that powers the story, with repeated revolts by the masses and hair-raising escapes by Graham, who is not only sucked into the battles but becomes the cause of them. Good guys become bad guys, friends become enemies, and just who can a guy from the past trust?? Be prepared fo

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A 1898 prediction of what life will be in the 22nd Century
Review: Before the Wright Bros. flew the first plane, H.G. Wells wrote this novel of Graham, who falls into a deep coma in 19th Century England and who wakes to find himself in the year 2100. Of course the book is filled with futurist innovations, including radio, T.V. and the VCR. Planes are there too, but wildly inaccurate--technologically they're not even up to the level of World War I. And there are other missteps: a base-12 counting system. But what is stunning is the accuracy of the socio-economic predictions of Wells. He lived in a time when the common man was striving for economic equality with the elite. But he predicts a back sliding, so that there is a huge schism between the haves and have-nots. It is this schism that powers the story, with repeated revolts by the masses and hair-raising escapes by Graham, who is not only sucked into the battles but becomes the cause of them. Good guys become bad guys, friends become enemies, and just who can a guy from the past trust?? Be prepared fo

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Spectacular Prophetic Work
Review: H.G. Wells is perhaps one of the greatest modern writers, and his stunning book "When The Sleeper Wakes" is the embodiment of his incredible prohpetic writing. This is an essential book, if for no other reason than it's frighteningly close-to-home predictions of the future. The story follows a modern day Rumplestiltskin, named Graham, after he sleeps a couple of centuries and wakes up to find himself owner of over half of the earth. The story itself is well-crafted, as Wells demonstrates a strong command of the English language. But this book is not merely a "good read". The most amazing aspect is that H.G. Wells predicted the widespread use of airtravel over a hundred years ago, along with mega-corporations that dominate a single industry, and roadside billboard advertisements. These are just a few of the remarkable, and accurate, predictions H.G. Wells made. It's hard to believe this book was written in the 1890's. The story is engaging as well, even if your not concerned with the social and political warnings of this tale. Only a few of the characters are extensively, namely Ostrog and Graham. But since it's a short story, this doesn't detract from the overall plot. The setting and tone of the story are the most important elements, and these are expertly developed. There is little wrong with this book. It's a little on the short side, but it still makes for an excellent choice.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Dawn of Science Fiction
Review: In "When the Sleeper Wakes", H.G. Wells departs from his previous occupation of writing novels based on fantasy and fabrication and turns to using the methods of science fiction and applying his projections of societal development to his stories.

In making his projections of what the future was to be like, Wells saw the enemy as monopolist/capitalist and portrayed them in the future as the great corporation.

This was the evil of capitalism, which lead Wells to conclude that the business states would take the place of what was 19th Century Governments.

The flaw with this in the novel is that as a result of this new type of order, individuals are victims of the category of person that fate places them in. People are measured by their utility or lack of utility.

Wells' vision is repulsive rather than desirable, and it is clear that he doesn't believe in the ability of society to live up to its own ideals of equality and justice.

We've seen this played out on the world stage during the industrial revolution, which gave birth to the evils of communism. Wells was a visionary, no doubt, but this story underestimates the human spirit and what happens when you combine Democracy with Capitalism!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Dawn of Science Fiction
Review: In "When the Sleeper Wakes", H.G. Wells departs from his previous occupation of writing novels based on fantasy and fabrication and turns to using the methods of science fiction and applying his projections of societal development to his stories.

In making his projections of what the future was to be like, Wells saw the enemy as monopolist/capitalist and portrayed them in the future as the great corporation.

This was the evil of capitalism, which lead Wells to conclude that the business states would take the place of what was 19th Century Governments.

The flaw with this in the novel is that as a result of this new type of order, individuals are victims of the category of person that fate places them in. People are measured by their utility or lack of utility.

Wells' vision is repulsive rather than desirable, and it is clear that he doesn't believe in the ability of society to live up to its own ideals of equality and justice.

We've seen this played out on the world stage during the industrial revolution, which gave birth to the evils of communism. Wells was a visionary, no doubt, but this story underestimates the human spirit and what happens when you combine Democracy with Capitalism!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A genious book from a genious writer
Review: The Everyman edition is really great, though it has many additional information about H.G. Wells and his time. So if you want to get additional information this book is the right one. John Lawtons introduction gives you a brief overview about H.G. Wells and the book. A listing of historical facts, Wells life and science and art, sort by date, gives the reader the possibility to understand his books better. At the end some critics are collected and suggestions for further reading are made.

The book itself / Summary:
A stranger came to an artist and reported him that he can't sleep. The artist invites him in his house, where the stranger falls asleep in a chair. The artist thinks he died, as he doesn't react anymore, but he just fell into a deep trance. The years passed on and Isbister, the artist, doesn't believe that he will ever wake again.
But long after Isbister's death, Graham, the stranger, wakes in an unknown surrounding and everything seems very strange. From outside he can hear people screaming "Wake" but he doesn't know what this means and soon after his awakening he faints. After he recovers he is told that his trance lasted 203 years. He learns a lot about the new age and there is still the crowd which requires the Sleeper. Because of this, he goes on a balcony where the people can see him, but he is pulled away and a man leads him through a huge building and finally to the council. After a short discussion he is brought into 2 rooms, where he's kept imprisoned. In his room he discovers new things, but he doesn't get new information about the world. After a few days a few people help him to escape and after a chase he lands in a theatre, where the people receive him. But he is very weak and so he's brought into a small room, where Graham is told that he owns nearly the whole world, because his fortune grew steadily. He meets Lincoln, who was Ostrog's brother, who is the leader of the revolution, and an unknown beautiful woman. Graham appears in front of the crowd and tells them to march, because Lincoln told him to do so. Then a fight begins in front of the council house, which Graham watches guarded from the distance, but the enemies chase Graham and so he looses his guards and has to flee. In a lonely street he meets an old man, who tells him the history of the world and that Ostrog just takes advantage of the Sleeper. As Graham reveals himself the old man doesn't want to believe and so Graham goes back to Ostrog's headquarter, where he meets Ostrog for the first time. After watching the decline from the council, they go to the council house and Graham gets a Japanese attendant, whose name is Asano. Graham and Asano go to the top of a wind-vane and later to a high society party, where Graham is told much more about the world. After Graham flew with an Aeropile, an aeroplane, he is so fascinated that he spends his next days with becoming an aeronaut. Then he meets again the unknown woman, which is Helen Woton, a niece of Ostrog, she reports him of the slavery and bad conditions under which the people are living and begs that he should rule. He discusses his knew knowledge with Ostrog, but he tries to convince him that everything is necessary. However Graham, guarded by Asano, goes into the city to see how the people are really living. After watching the middle class and the stations in which children are brought up, he goes to the working places of the poor workers. He's very upset while watching them, but he hears shouts which tell him that the black police is coming. The black police is feared, as they are a cruel specialist unit of Negros, which should bring the people into order. Graham and Asano flee back to the headquarter, where Graham has a quarrel with Ostrog and as a result Ostrog wants to imprison him. However the crowd sees this and they free Graham, but an Aeropile can help Ostrog to escape. Helen comes back and Graham holds a speech to the people to prepare them for a war to prevent the black police from reaching London. They can capture one flight stage out of four, but this is not enough and so Graham decides to take an Aeropile to fight against the aeroplanes, which bring the black police. He's successful and able to dispel and even destroy some ships from the black police. After this large fight, he sees the Aeropile in which Ostrog flees and he starts to fight it but he looses and the earth is coming near.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Extraordinary Prophecy
Review: Wells has done it again. The prophetic vision of this writer is as spooky as it is acute. Other than lacking a strong ending, this book is superb fiction and even better social critique. A must read.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: When the sleeper wakes...
Review: When the sleeper wakes is a fairly good book, but not something I would choose to read again. The book doesn't exactly give either a realistic or creative idea for the future, when 'The Sleeper' ends up in 2010. There are barely any things that change in those two hundred years, which is an odd concept to handle. How they refer to people is the same as in the beginning of the story when he's in the 1800's.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Spectacular Prophetic Work
Review: Written in the final years of the 19th century by an acknowledged scientific visionary, this book is stunning for its portrayal not just of "modern techological" creations. First and foremost, this book hints at the dramatic societal changes that followed in the 20th century. Most readers will remember Wells' use of the airplane, television, radar, etc. in this novel written in the late 1890s. The conceptualization of these technological wonders for a 19th century inhabitant is remarkable, no doubt. True astonishment, however, arises from Wells' portrayal of societal conflict caused by the awakening of the "Sleeper". We now know, from our vantage point late in the 20th century, that this century will be remembered for pandemic social change, when a majority of mankind (in the many communist, nationalist, and independence movements) moved to a different drumbeat. In the course of these brief one-hundred years, masses have risen and elites fallen in societies on virtually all the continents. We know that redistributions of wealth and the power of mass education have been the historical catalysts. Wells uses the "sleeper" as the agent of change in this wonderfully prophetic novel.


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