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Dan's Reviews > The Time Machine

The Time Machine by H.G. Wells
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really liked it
bookshelves: 2016, 2016-books

A Victorian-era scientist calls together a group of men and tells them of his recent adventure, a trip through time...

I had intended to participate in a reading of this with the Distinguished Society of Pantless Readers but once I had a taste, I wolfed the whole tale down in one sitting.

The Time Machine is probably the first time travel story and definitely a spiritual ancestor of every time travel story since. The nameless time traveler whips up a time machine and travels through time. What could be simpler?

The Traveler goes to the year 802,000 and encounters the descendants of man, the Eloi and the Morlocks. Wells uses the Eloi and the Morlocks to illustrate the class differences in his own time but the Traveler's speculation on the haves and have-nots sounded very familiar, a nice bit of timeless social satire. After some misadventures, he returns home and no one believes him. To show those assholes, he goes on another jaunt and was never head from again. At least at the time of the Time Machine's publication.

The Time Machine broke a lot of new ground. It was probably the first time travel story and it could be argued that it was both the first dystopian sf story and the first Dying Earth tale. It's also not much of a stretch to call it an ancestor of the planetary romance genre as well. There's not a lot separating The Traveler from John Carter of Mars, if you think about it.

While there's a lot of fun timey-wimey stuff going on, Wells' prose isn't easy to digest. Part of it is the writing style of the time and another part is that science fiction was still in diapers at the time this was written.

Wells' depiction of future Earth was a very memorable one, one that influenced countless authors that came after. Adjusting for the time period, The Time Machine is a fun yet somewhat difficult read. Four out of five Sonic Screwdrivers.
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Reading Progress

January 28, 2016 – Shelved
January 28, 2016 – Shelved as: not-in-a-hurry-to-read
May 27, 2016 – Started Reading
May 27, 2016 –
page 21
17.8%
May 27, 2016 –
page 35
29.66%
May 27, 2016 –
page 54
45.76%
May 27, 2016 –
page 57
48.31%
May 27, 2016 –
page 61
51.69%
May 27, 2016 –
page 65
55.08%
May 27, 2016 –
page 73
61.86%
May 27, 2016 –
page 82
69.49%
May 27, 2016 –
page 85
72.03%
May 27, 2016 –
page 91
77.12%
May 27, 2016 –
page 104
88.14%
May 27, 2016 – Shelved as: 2016
May 27, 2016 – Finished Reading
July 15, 2016 – Shelved as: 2016-books

Comments Showing 1-10 of 10 (10 new)

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Erin *Proud Book Hoarder* It's something I've wanted to read for awhile. Great review, glad you enjoyed it.


message 2: by Henry (new) - added it

Henry Avila The Last Man, 1826, by Mary Shelley, of Frankenstein fame was the first major dying Earth novel, Dan...


message 3: by Mir (new) - rated it 5 stars

Mir It occurs to me that William Morris was rather unique in his optimism about the future (in the context of time-travel writing; obviously lots of people may be optimists).


message 4: by Fabian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Fabian  {Councillor} I've been interested in reading this for what feels like forever. Great review, Dan!


message 5: by Dan (new) - rated it 4 stars

Dan Councillor wrote: "I've been interested in reading this for what feels like forever. Great review, Dan!"

Thanks!


message 6: by Carmen (new) - rated it 4 stars

Carmen Great review!


message 7: by Dan (new) - rated it 4 stars

Dan Thanks!


message 8: by HENRY (new)

HENRY I cannot agree more. I just cant finish it, its difficult for me. English is not my native language.


William Thank you for the review!

I first read this as a comic book... loved it. In fact, my memories are mostly from the comic, not the novel !


message 10: by Dan (new) - rated it 4 stars

Dan I saw snippets of the movie years ago. The book holds up a lot better than I thought it would.


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