H(erbert) G(eorge)
Wells (1866-1946) |
| To see current stock by H.G. Wells
Click Here |
|
| |
|
| The world famous author of some
of our favourite science fiction novels, War Of The Worlds,
The Invisible Man, The Time Machine but there is just so much
more to the man. |
H G Wells was born in
Bromley, Kent in 1866, where his father was a housekeeper
and a professional cricketer, and his mother a part time housekeeper
at the Uppark Estate. In his early childhood Wells developed
a love of literature and could often be found studying books
in the library. After his father’s business failed,
he became, along with his brothers, an apprentice to a draper.
In 1893 Wells became a pupil/teacher at Midhurst Grammar School
and obtained |
|
| a scholarship to the normal
school of Science in London. At the Normal school he studied
biology under T.H. Huxley, but never managed to complete
his studies, leaving in 1887 when his interest faltered.
After teaching at private schools for 4 years he finally
obtained his degree in 1890. In following year he married
his cousin Isabel, and by 1893 became a full time writer. |
 |
Wells left Isabel for one of his pupils, Amy Catherine, whom
he married in 1895. In this same year his first book The Time
Machine was published, from which he gained much credit and
a little fame.
Wells’s books were not only entertaining but he also
tried to provoke debate into the future of mankind and where
it would lead. Wells’s ideas of ‘science’
were not appreciated by all and it is rumoured the French
novelist Jules Verne commented on Wells’s book as having
“scientifically implausible ideas” whilst Wells
claimed “Verne couldn’t write himself out of a
paper sack!”
Dissatisfied with his literary work, Wells moved into the
novel genre and then after World War 1 into non-fiction books
which include The Science of Life (1929-30) |
and Experiment in Autobiography
(1934). Just before the war, Wells had a love affair with
a young journalist, Rebecca West, 24 years his junior. Their
son Anthony West later wrote about their difficult relationship.
|
The Time Machine >
Between the wars Wells dabbled with politics
both in his writing and his life. This included standing
for parliament as a labour candidate in the early 1920’s.
In 1934 both Stalin and Roosevelt met with Wells to try
and recruit him to their world saving scheme as at the
time Wells had risen to a popular celebrity. Stalin left
Wells disillusioned and feeling that Western socialism
cannot compromise with Communism and that the best future
lay in America.
|
|
The irony of the situation was that one of Wells’s many
mistresses, Moura Budberg, turned out to be a long serving
Russian spy. |
|
Maybe the most famous reproduction of Wells’s book,
The War of the Worlds, was the hoax radio broadcast in Newark,
New Jersey, USA, which caused congregations to fall to their
knees and residents of a block of flats to leave the building
with wet towels around their heads!
Wells lived though the second world war in his house in
London, refusing to leave, and wrote his final book Mind
At the End of Its Tether (1945) which reflected his pessimism
about mankind’s future. Through the years Wells wrote
over 100 books varying in subject matter from science fiction
to sociology.
Contributed by Adam Parker |
|