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The War of the Worlds

The War of the Worlds

List Price: $4.99
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: How did he go wrong?
Review: Dull, dull, dull. Yes. I am talking about the novel The War of the Worlds about an alien invasion from Mars. And it's boring! So very, very boring. Wells writes like a passionless, uncaring observer, so when the Martians start roasting us, who really cares? I sure don't. Call me gauche, but I would rather read a sf book that was entertaining, than this so called "classic" that bored the daylights out of me.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A book that captured the mind and frightened the soul!!
Review: I think this book was great!!!!!! The impressive and breath taking tale describes the Martian invasion of earth. Ten huge tireless beings land in England and complete pandemonium breaks out. Using their burning heat rays and shattering force the pitiless aliens may be able to win in the fight for life. Is the human race doomed? -The War Of The Worlds By: H.G. Wells

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A book that captured the mind and frightened the soul!!
Review: The impressive and breath takeing tale describes the Martian invasion of earth. Ten huge tireless beings land in England and complete pandemonium breaks out. Using their burning heat rays and shatering force the pitiless aliens may be able to win in the fight for life. Is the human race doomed? -The War Of The Worlds By: H.G. Wells

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Book Especially For It's Time
Review: I thought this book was extremely well done for being written so many years ago. I read this book just a year ago when I was 13 and loved it. Wells explains everything so well that it gives you just a perfect image in your mind. Wells is the master of science fiction! He came up with so many original, unthought of ideas such as these alien attacks, the classic invisible man, and the most famous the idea of a time machine!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Things to come
Review: "... across the vast gulf of space, mind that are to our minds as ours are to the beasts that perish. Intelects, vast, cool and unsympathetic, regarded our world with envious eyes and slowly and surely drew their plans against us."

Even after many times in reading, that opening, with visions of the red planet, drying canals and Gustav Holst playing in the backround, plays almost cinimaticaly across my imagination. Surely the best opening to any book I have ever read.

While I think "War of the Worlds" stands as Wells's masterpiece, it's too bad that Hollywood has passed over this work. I don't count Gorge Pal's 1960s version, it is standard Cold War fare with the church bells ringing at the end... blech.

There have been imitators, of course. "Independance Day" is the most recent, but the only quality treatment of Wells invasion from mars was The Mercury Theater's Halloween 1938 production with Orson Wells.

And even that boiled it down to its essentials of invasion, desparation, futility and reprive. "The War of the Worlds" was an exploration of how we, as humans, have treated our own world and the 'aliens' of our own planet. The animals, environments and fellow humans that have been trampled beneath the feet of so-called civilization. We think ourselves those 'vast intellects', taking the world for our own, our advance only irritated by 'godless savages', beings of little consequence.

And still, 100 years after it was first published, Wells cautionary tale still holds true. Except that now, the earth is holding us to account as the Martians had to account to the microbes that spelled their demise. Global warming, antibiotic-resistant disease, over-population, species extinction, are these the things that bring to an end our dominion on this earth, the earth that we, in many ways, stole from ourselves, unthinking of the consequences as the Martian were oblivious to the consequences of their invasion?

We know Mars to be a dead world but 100 years ago it was widely believed that, not only did Mars have life but it had intelligent life. But until Wells came along with his tentacled horrors to dethrone man kind from his empire over the earth, the earthlings thought looked on those that might one day be found on Mars as they had looked on the natives of Africa, the Americas, India and China; savages to be brought under the tutalage of Western society.

The more things change, the more things stay the same. Will Wells's warnings continue to fall on deaf ears?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An answer to the question: Are we alone?
Review: Maybe you thought that this was a nice little planet. Maybe you thought that you were safe and secure here on earth. Maybe you thought it would go on like this forever. Maybe you're right. Then again, maybe you're wrong.

The people in this story are ordinary people. They have jobs, they go to work, they have their friends. But the folks in this story aren't going to have a regular old Sunday this week. Because this week, a large hollow cylinder will fall from the sky and into a field near their town. Its point of origin: Mars. Its occupants: Martians. The townspeople will, of course, examine it, but most of them won't think anything of it- merely some strange, sluggish creatures from a world far inferior to their own. That is where they're wrong. These creatures possess far more advanced technology than has ever been imagined. Their heat-rays, their poisonous gasses, and their super-strong fighting armor are just a sampling of what these monstrous creatures have to offer- but the worst is yet to come. Th

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Original Sci-Fi!
Review: Do you like science fiction? Then read the book the started it all! The original book on alien attack, this book is so weird because it is pure imagination. Wells had nothing to build on, and this book is the foundation. Jeremy Swanson

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Worth the read!
Review: While not the science fiction most are used to, this is a haunting and fascinating look at an alien invasion. No courageous fighting back, no sly hero that saves the day; just the pure terror of beings with technology far superior to ours. Granted, I found the book a tad slow in spots, but overall, it is very well-written and serves as an excellent look into the human psyche when we are the hunted. Enjoy!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A race of aliens with very human characteristics
Review: Many people who have heard of "The War of the Worlds" may have seen the movie without reading the book. The movie was set in Cold War America, with martians that flew in what looked like greenish manta rays. The book was set in Victorian England, and the martians looked like towering tripods. In both versions however the premise is the same: Earth invaded by a superior alien intelligence. HG Wells wrote about humanity's ego and complacency being crushed by a highly developed lifeform.

"The War of the Worlds" has been interpreted as an allegory of imperialism. Just as the British took over other countries to make them part of the Empire, so too is the Earth being taken over by the Martians. They even bring their own plant life with them, the "Red Weed". The Martians see us as vermin, trying to wipe us out with heat rays and poisonous black gas. Thats's what makes the story so much fun. It is frightening in a cosy sort of way. We read the story in a safe, comfortable room, while the narrator talks of all the death and destruction he sees.

An interesting point that Issac Asimov once brought up was that if alien intelligence did exist, their advanced evolution would also mean they would be emotionally superior to us. They would not act like barbarians, as war is a primitive thing. When people write alien invasion stories, they are really saying something about us. We are destructive and aggressive by nature. Our history has been one long story of conquest, slavery and even genocide. So HG Wells has put a little bit of us into his Martians. Both metaphorically (as imperialists), and literally (as food).

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Hard to hate creatures with such cool toys
Review: I don't know if H.G. Wells can take all the credit for pioneering modern science fiction, but his 1898 novel "The War of the Worlds" is certainly a revolutionary stroke, apparently the first conception of what a hostile extraterrestrial invasion would be like. The invaders here are Martians, who, as Wells describes, are superevolved beyond humans, having had to sharpen their intelligence and develop superior technology in order to survive their planet's cold climate. Looking with jealousy towards their larger, warmer sunward planetary neighbor, they have decided to take over Earth, where they can build a new civilization.

Meanwhile on Earth, astronomers, their telescopes pointed towards Mars, notice strange luminous flashes on the surface of the red planet; these, it can be surmised, are the Martians launching their interplanetary spacecrafts towards their target. A few months later the crafts land in the English countryside one at a time; it turns out the Martians have traveled in gigantic cylinders which contain all their equipment, including their land vehicles--tall walking tripods with rotating control centers that look like hooded human heads--which evidently are stored in parts and need to be assembled. These machines have weapons that deploy "Heat-Rays" which roast anything on contact and dense black powder which poisons the air and water. With these undeniably cool toys, the Martians have no problems advancing towards London and decimating every living thing in their path.

Undiplomatic and incommunicative with earthlings, the Martians are cold-blooded killers with possibly the ultimate goal of enslaving the human species for labor in their colonies. The Martian beings themselves are described as vaguely globular, tentacular monsters that are mostly brain and little else, creatures seemingly borrowed from the distant future of Wells's imagination in "The Time Machine." What I found most original and bizarre about them was Wells's description of their machinery, which does not use wheels or any kind of angular mechanism, but rather complex systems of sliding parts on curved surfaces--in other words, their mechanisms approximate biomechanisms. Their cleverness is indeed formidable, but their information about Earth is lacking in one important area which causes their downfall.

The human characters in the novel are hardly worth mentioning, especially the narrator, which is probably why he doesn't have a name; he is used simply as an eyewitness to relate the events. The Martians and their incredible machines were the only things that really drew my interest because Wells is at his best when he invokes the horror of the unknown rather than the realities of human behavior. Upon its first appearance, this novel must have struck many Victorians as distastefully grotesque, the idea of a cataclysmic war (at the dawn of the century that invented the cataclysmic war) the willful nightmare of a madman; but Wells was a visionary if not the most elegant writer, and visionaries sometimes shock us.


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