The War of the Worlds
A Critical Text of the 1898 London First Edition, with an Introduction, Illustrations and Appendices
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About the Book
Wells’ novel, a “scientific romance,” attained perhaps its greatest fame in another form, the infamous realistic 1939 radio broadcast “Invasion from Mars” by the redoubtable Orson Welles. It was also notably made into an early fifties science fiction adventure movie (and there have been other adaptations as well). So indelible is the association that the novel, like the panic inducing broadcast and the Hollywood flick, now is taken as little more than a light fantasy of outerspace terror and human heroism, far from the author’s original vision. The War of the Worlds is a philosophical tale and as such, is profoundly ideological. The world of the Martians represents the progressive future of humanity in a cultural war with our world of tradition and reaction—these are the two worlds in question.
The Mars from which the invaders come is united by a planet-wide system of irrigation canals; for Wells this indicates a socialist world-state. The red planet is red in more than one sense, pointing the direction of terrestrial progress. The Martians in the novel are octopoidal monsters, bodily anticipating the tentacular, all-controlling totalitarian regimes of the twentieth century.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
H.G. Wells
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 333
Bibliographic Info: 10 photos, map, annotations, appendices, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2012 [2001]
pISBN: 978-0-7864-6872-0
Imprint: McFarland
Series: The Annotated H.G. Wells
Table of Contents
Preface ix
Introduction 1
1. The Text 1
2. The Frontispiece 3
3. Benevolent Catastrophe 13
4. Socialist Mars 26
5. Vampire State 37
The War of the Worlds (1898) 47
(Annotated text of the first London edition) 52
Appendices
I. “The Man of the Year Million,” by H.G. Wells (1893) 257
II. “Administrative Areas,” by H.G. Wells (1903) 264
III. “The Philosophy of a Bacteriologist,” a Review by H.G. Wells (1903) 278
IV. Preface to the Atlantic Edition (1924) 284
V. Excerpt from Philosophical Dialogues, by Ernest Renan (1883) 286
VI. Excerpt from Mars, by Percival Lowell (1896) 297
Bibliography 305
Index 319
Book Reviews & Awards
“Wells’s masterpieces get the red-carpet treatment here in these luxurious editions…academic collections supporting English departments should definitely invest in this volume”—Library Journal; “Stover is to be thanked for his years of Wellsian scholarship”—Public Library Quarterly; “Stover, by presenting the intellectual underpinnings of Wells’ work, has provided a powerful tool for understanding his writings, one sees them more deeply, without losing that earlier sense-of-wonder that originally opened the vistas of the young reader’s mind…a crucial guide to these classics of science fiction”—Fosfax; “two cheers for Stoverism…formidable scholarship…serious students of Wells would be foolish to ignore ‘Stoverism’”—The Wellsian; “Stover should be commended for a painstaking and meticulous editorial commentary”—Utopian Studies; “extensively annotated and analyzed by Stover…annotations are filled with insights into Wells’ writings and philosophy”—C&RL News.