The Time Machine by H. G. Wells, Jose Alfonso Ocampo Ruiz (Illustrator), Terry Davis (Retold by)

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Synopsis

Note to Adobe eBook Customers: The Adobe Acrobat eBook Reader version is printable, but there is a known problem printing to printers that do not use the PostScript page description language. This problem occurs with some HP LaserJet, Epson Stylus inkjet, and Epson impact printers. Consult your printer’s documentation to find out if it is PostScript compatible. This does not affect your ability to read the book on screen.

Published in 1895, The Time Machine was the first novel to suggest the theme of time travel by machine, and along with other books by Wells, it was a forerunner of the contemporary science fiction genre, then known as “scientific romances.”

Wells wrote mainly speculative fiction concerned with the contemporary problems of human society and its possible futures. While his works express a hope in human technology and progress, this is tempered by a realization of the possible extinction of humanity through the very same technology and the predilections of human nature.

There is a strong ethical component to his work and this relates to the ambivalence that he often expressed about the potentialities of human nature. One of the central issues that concerned him was the disparity between the elite and the masses. The Time Machine explores these concerns in a setting 800,000 years into the future.

Annotation

Note to Adobe Customers: The Adobe Acrobat eBook Reader version is printable, but there is a known problem printing to printers that do not use the PostScript page description language. This problem occurs with some HP LaserJet, Epson Stylus inkjet, and Epson impact printers. Consult your printer’s documentation to find out if it is PostScript compatible. This does not affect your ability to read the book on screen.

Gale Research

All along, Wells had nurtured a single promising idea, first introduced in "The Chronic Argonauts," published in his college magazine two years after he dropped out of school--an idea that he hoped would establish him as a novelist in his own right. Developed after many false starts, it finally appeared as The Time Machine in 1895. This first novel was hailed as a work of genius, and it is regarded by today's critics as the one great Victorian epic dramatizing the Darwinian vision of cosmic time outside historical time.

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Biography

"Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe," H. G. Wells once said. Widely revered as the father of science fiction, the English novelist, journalist, sociologist, and historian penned ominous -- and educated -- glimpses at humanity's possible future, including The Time Machine (1895), The Invisible Man (1897), and The War of the Worlds (1898).

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Customer Reviews

MASTERFUL!!!by Anonymous

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October 19, 2008: H G Wells has awakened the world with his art of tale through the travel of time. He is the inspiration of every time travel writer in existence today, with no exception, myself included. Along with great classics like Twenty-thousand Leagues Under the Sea, I remember the first time reading these classics. I was in awe. Though time travel, a genre given life by H G Wells is the ultimate epic sci-fi adventure. The very idea of time travel has opened the eyes of every imagination in my soul. The ramifications are endless. H G Well's Time Machine is my favorite, all time story. Even when you think of how the future looked as grim as it did thousands of years from the story-line's origination, one only needs to remember that this tale is merely one possiblity of billions that could be changed with a simple act of maybe a push of a button or even less. I believe THAT was the message Wells was revealing to us all. This is a very well written story that I highly recommend to anyone of any age or time. This very book was my biggest inspiration since I was first able to read.

I Also Recommend: Love Returns Through The Portal Of Time, War of the Worlds (Barnes & Noble Classics Series), Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (Barnes & Noble Classics Series).

Not so goodby Anonymous

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June 23, 2007: I found the Time Machine to be a tad confusing. In fact I had to read it for 5th grade summer reading, I was unbelievably confused. I really don't recommend this book unless you are really into sci-fi or are an amazing reader.


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