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Rating: Summary: Sci-Fi classic Review: As a child I always heard about the story and radio broadcast, and I had the 2 CD musical version created in the 70s. I never read the book, and I was always curious about the story and broadcast. This book is exactly what I wanted - the H.G. Wells original story, the radio adaptation text and extras like the press conference the day after, and a CD with the broadcast. Fabulous compilation!
Rating: Summary: Encore ! ........Encore ! Review: I am an Old Time Radio fanatic. I love War or the Worlds and this book is the definte history of this imfamous radio broadcast. The Mercury Theater on The Air was such a great crew and this book tells a great deal about them.
Rating: Summary: mikes review Review: I thought the war of the worlds was an ok book the thing's i didnt like about it was that in alot of parts in the book it dragged on and on like they just kept on running and running from the martians from mar's.Thing's i enjoyed about the book were it was cool about them breathing fire on the people at where the cylinder first fell.I also liked the times when the martians started destroying everything but it dragged on alot. Ialso enjoyed when the army came and tried to shoot down the martians but nothing happend.
Rating: Summary: Richly Satisfying Package of Text, Sound, and Pictures Review: The editors of this book have done a great job of putting together a wonderful CD/book package on "The War of the Worlds" as originally written by H.G. Wells and reinterpreted by Orson Welles and many others. The texts of both the original novel and the radio broadcast are included, but there is so much more! The novel is accompanied by the original Warwick Goble illustrations that appeared in Pearson's Magazine in 1897. Although, as is often the case in reproductions, the illustrations lose a little clarity, they are still a splendid addition to the text and add to the pleasure of reading it. The transcript of the Mercury Theatre radio play is in the text and the recording of the original broadcast is included on the accompanying compact disc. The disc has three interviews with Orson Welles about the broadcast, including one where he appeared with H. G. Wells on a Texas radio station in 1940. The disc also includes an excerpt from a broadcast of a different updated War of the Worlds presentation on a Buffalo, N.Y. radio station in 1968. The book is divided into three parts. The first part is called The Broadcast and contains the full text of the radio play as well as two articles about the production, the players, and the effects of the broadcast. Both are wonderfully illustrated with newspaper clippings and black & white photographs. Since neither are signed, I assume they were written by the editors, Brian Holmsten and Alex Lubertozzi. These two articles are excellent at setting the context of the broadcast and the background of the Mercury Theatre as well as telling the story of the panic resulting from the broadcast and the press coverage that followed. The second part of the book deals with other interpretations of this story and other stories of life on Mars. This is the shortest section, but it is the only section of the book that has color illustrations. In one page, the book briefly covers George Pal's 1953 movie, the Fox 1988 television series, Jeff Wayne's London musical comedy, and the CBS TV presentation of "The Night America Trembled." The cursory review of other literary works that are based on the works of Wells and Welles is interesting reading, but would have benefited from more detail. The third part of the book consists of an unsigned brief biography of H. G. Wells (presumably written by the two editors) which is followed by the text of the original novel. The biography is also illustrated with wonderful black and white pictures. A Forward by Ray Bradbury and an Afterword by Ben Bova round out the book. Bradbury talks about the two writers and their works, while Dr. Bova discusses the scientific exploration of Mars. A two page bibliography with lots of links to Internet resources completes the book and gives the reader many resources for further information. This is a richly rewarding book with excellent illustrations, the complete texts of both versions of The War of the Worlds, and wonderful articles on the background and effects of both works. If you want to read The War of the Worlds, this is the book for you.
Rating: Summary: The Martians Are Coming...Again! Review: This is sort of the ultimate fanzine for WAR OF THE WORLDS enthusiasts. Complete with CD that includes excerpts from an actual meeting between H.G. Wells and Orson Welles! The book is great fun and includes more info than you'll ever need about the legends and facts surrounding the infamous broadcasts and the book itself, which is actually a horror story. Sitting on my desk where I write is a small, polished pebble that I lifted from the actual sandpits in Woking, England--the landing site of H.G. Wells' martian invasion. The pebble is a relic of a fictitious war for which, like the recent attacks on America, no-one was prepared. Wells was living in a time of unrest, when anarchists (make that terrorists) might strike any time at the British Empire, and the portent of wars to come was everywhere. WAR OF THE WORLDS was a wake-up call forty years before Orson Welles brought it back to life. Go read the original WAR OF THE WORLDS--it's scarier than any movie version that's been done (including the 1950's film, the later TV series, and INDEPENDENCE DAY). H.G. Wells dominated the first half of the 20th Century in his independent and cautionary thinking. Ray Bradbury dominated the second half. Read them both! And join the H.G. Wells Societies in England and the U.S. You'll be amazed! --Jim Reed...
Rating: Summary: The Martians Are Coming...Again! Review: This is sort of the ultimate fanzine for WAR OF THE WORLDS enthusiasts. Complete with CD that includes excerpts from an actual meeting between H.G. Wells and Orson Welles! The book is great fun and includes more info than you'll ever need about the legends and facts surrounding the infamous broadcasts and the book itself, which is actually a horror story. Sitting on my desk where I write is a small, polished pebble that I lifted from the actual sandpits in Woking, England--the landing site of H.G. Wells' martian invasion. The pebble is a relic of a fictitious war for which, like the recent attacks on America, no-one was prepared. Wells was living in a time of unrest, when anarchists (make that terrorists) might strike any time at the British Empire, and the portent of wars to come was everywhere. WAR OF THE WORLDS was a wake-up call forty years before Orson Welles brought it back to life. Go read the original WAR OF THE WORLDS--it's scarier than any movie version that's been done (including the 1950's film, the later TV series, and INDEPENDENCE DAY). H.G. Wells dominated the first half of the 20th Century in his independent and cautionary thinking. Ray Bradbury dominated the second half. Read them both! And join the H.G. Wells Societies in England and the U.S. You'll be amazed! --Jim Reed...
Rating: Summary: Martians Continue to Wage War on Planet Earth Review: War of the Worlds enthusiasts continue to love, emulate and draw new stories from this, the original outer-space invasion novel. The story has been filmed twice--once as a television series and once as a 1950's sci-fi epic--but it's been copied and re-told many times in other films, INDEPENDENCE DAY included. What would Hollywood do without this original, one-of-a-kind horror story? This new book has everything, including a CD and excerpts from a recorded discussion between H.G. Wells and Orson Welles, as well as the original 1938 Welles broadcast, and two press conferences with Welles. What's missing is the fascinating story of how and why Wells wrote this story (it's truly a horror tale--our hero has to sit in an abandoned house for days, listening to the Martians eating live humans, for instance), which contains many of the same suspenseful elements you'll find in other classics that will not die--such as FRANKENSTEIN, DRACULA and SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES. When I traveled to England to attend a meeting of the H.G. Wells Society in 1998 (the centenary of War of the Worlds' publication), I was treated to a walking tour of the actual Martian landing site, the sand pits of Woking. Then, we followed the same path that the Martians traversed during their campaign against the world. A small, polished pebble lifted from the sandpits sits before my writing desk, a relic of a fictitious war for which, like the recent attacks on New York, Washington and Pennsylvania, no-one was prepared. Wells was living in a time of unrest, when anarchists (terrorists?) might strike at any time at the powerful and arrogant British Empire, and the portent of war was everywhere. War of the Worlds was a wake-up call! Ray Bradbury's foreword is worth the price of the book. He is truly Wells' successor--a behavioral optimist who in every way is the kind of writer Wells tried to be. Incidentally, Bradbury once told me that he missed his chance to meet H.G. Wells when he lectured in L.A. Bradbury was a high school student and didn't have the price of admission. Besides, he told me, "I was afraid I'd die of a heart attack if I met him!" Wells dominated the first half of the 20th Century, Bradbury the second half. Both were believers in the potential and unrealized greatness of humankind. Both are worth reading. --Jim Reed, author of DAD'S TWEED COAT: SMALL WISDOMS, HIDDEN COMFORTS, UNEXPECTED JOYS
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