Time Machine by H.G. Wells
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Re: Time Machine by H.G. Wells
I highly recommend reading some of his work, Island of Doctor Moraeu really doesn't stand the test of time for me and the Time Machine really suffers from all the adaptations its had. However the Invisible Man is still ok and War of the World is still amazing.shanet wrote:I have not read Wells at all and based on the reviews it seems that I should bypass him. He is considered a classic read and the premises have been made into movies. So, should I put forth the time to read Wells?
But my personnel favorite is 'First Men in the Moon', probably not as well written as War of the Worlds but i never heard anything about so it before so it was a pleasant surprise (also the 60's movie with effects by Harryhasuen is pretty decent too).
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What is science fiction without social commentary? What I found interesting about the dichotomy between the upper and lower societies stems from even farther back - the portrayal of the utopian state. Gentle child-like beings vs brutes, the traits that Wells chose to emphasize in the classes - how different the perception of the classes are to more modern readers.bookworm1990 wrote: ↑12 May 2014, 13:20 Although The Time Machine isn't one of my favorite books I'm glad I read it. It's a relatively short book that only took me a couple of days to read. What stuck with me the most was the dichotomy of the above and below ground creatures. The ones above ground were childish and defenseless while the ones below ground were menacing and predatory. They below ground creatures reminded me of miners from the 19th century who spent hours underground in the darkness. Perhaps there's a little social commentary there?
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The Time Machine actually ended up becoming one of my all-time favorite books. It's one of the books that I can actually reread over and over and still find something that I missed before. One of the things that I do know about HG Wells is that he didn't need to drag out a story. He could combined so many things and elements going on at the same time that he didn't have to elaborate on things to the point where you're staring at the page trying to figure out exactly what he's talking about. He has a way of telling a story where you can visualize exactly what he's saying. In The Time Machine, I think he explains exactly where Society is going and we're continues to go. Eloi are the entitled people that we know today they are the people who think that everything should just be handed to them they don't have to work for anything not even for their own lives which is depicted when Weena falls into the river and nobody tries to save her. She doesn't even try to save herself. The Morlocks represent the working class, who during the Time Travelers Time, were finding other ways to get to and from work like the subway and other underground Transportation or transit systems. It's no wonder that they climbed out from underneath the Earth and took out the weaker of the species as if they were cattle. The time traveler even went so far into the future that we had destroyed ourselves. Which sounds like exactly what we would do to ourselves. The Elio we're so unaware that they were literally the food source for the more dominant species, that even when one of their own would get taken they never even bother looking for them. They just accepted their lives the way that they were, he never giving a thought to what they are absent-mindedness and laziness brought to our species as a whole.
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