The Time Machine: An Invention (Modern Library Classics)
by H.G. Wells
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 4311)
bookshelves:
bookclub,
classics,
sci-fi
Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
sci-fi junkies, socialists, Rory Gilmore Book Club!
"There is no intelligence where there is no change and no need of change."
Ugh! This is not my favorite type of book. However, I appreciated the opportunity to delve outside of my comfort zone and embrace a little "sci-fi." And H.G. Wells, the father of all sci-fi, was a fitting place to start.
The narrator of The Time Machine is "The Time Traveller." The book starts in his home, as he is recounting his adventures to a group of listeners. On the first ...more
Ugh! This is not my favorite type of book. However, I appreciated the opportunity to delve outside of my comfort zone and embrace a little "sci-fi." And H.G. Wells, the father of all sci-fi, was a fitting place to start.
The narrator of The Time Machine is "The Time Traveller." The book starts in his home, as he is recounting his adventures to a group of listeners. On the first ...more
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Read in January, 2004
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This was my favorite book was I was 12. I don't know why I decided to read it again, but I did. It was, predictably, a completely different novel than I remembered. I think part of the weirdness came from the new introduction (written by Paul Youngquist) that essentially described Wells as this totally insane person who attacked every person and every entity he experienced in his entire lifetime, often contradicting whatever attack he had made just days before. He responded to all the perceived ...more
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Read in December, 2007
I picked up The Time Ships at a used bookstore last week to read on the plane, but discovered in the first few pages that it was a sequel, of sorts, to H.G. Wells' The Time Machine. And I realized that while I certainly knew the story of Wells' novel, I wasn't sure if I had ever read it.
So I downloaded the text from <...more
So I downloaded the text from <...more
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Read in December, 2007
The Time Machine by H.G. Wells is a good book so far. It is about the Time Traveler as he envents his new time machine that could travel to the fourth deminsion. The only problems is that Filby and the Medical Man did not know if the time traveller was clever enough to do so.On a Thursday the Time Michines of michines took off. When the machine stopped the Time Traveller looked around and observed the land. He said that the land was misty and vagued. The trees looked like puffs of vapor one b...more
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Read in January, 1998
Time Machine was required reading for a course I took in college about the history/evolution of science and man's place in nature. Wells' classic, along with Shelley's Frankenstein and Stevenson's Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, was written in response to the panic that ensued following Darwin's publication of The Origin of Species. People were freaked out by the idea that we evolved from "lesser creatures" and feared that if evolution explains how humans developed, then "de-eveolution...more
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bookshelves:
science-fiction---read
Read in June, 2005
recommends it for:
Those interested in classic science fiction
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Read in July, 2008
Our community is doing the "Time Machine" as its "one great read" selection this summer. Although the classic 1960s Rod Taylor movie is one of my all-time favorites, I had never actually read the book. Now I have. It's an amazing story, and I enjoyed comparing it to the movie -- they're different in several significant ways. However, as a work of fiction, I can't say it was a great read. The writing is rather dry, and the story is told in a curious dual-1st person style: it ...more
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finished
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Read in March, 2008
This was a surprisingly fast read. I enjoyed the narration greatly. Wells does a good job of including detail but not over doing the descriptions. The story was different than many movie versions I've seen, but I suppose that is the way it is when books are made into movies.
*Spoiler*
I was amazed that in all of the movie versions that I have seen of this book that none of them to my knowledge mention the fact that the Morlocks are cannibals. It is an intriguing idea to think that our descend...more
*Spoiler*
I was amazed that in all of the movie versions that I have seen of this book that none of them to my knowledge mention the fact that the Morlocks are cannibals. It is an intriguing idea to think that our descend...more
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bookshelves:
dystopias-and-utopias,
post-apocalyptic
Read in April, 2008
Ooo - I liked this a lot! What rich worlds Wells creates! In the year 802701 A.D., humans have evolved ("evolved"?) into two distinct species, borne from an increasingly growing chasm between the leisure class and the working class. The Time Traveler experiences this world in a way that is both entertaining and aphoristic. He finds that without challenges and change, humans have become simplistic and animalistic. He theorizes that "an animal perfectly in harmony with its environme...more
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2 comments
bookshelves:
classics
Read in January, 2006
this book freaked me out. the wimpy little elois and the scary pale morlocks. i liked when the time traveler sees the museam and all the relics. It's kind of like in Planet of the Apes, when they realize they're on earth- to see all the evidence of your life on display in a museam- imagine how that would feel! and what did the morlocks actually do- they ran machines, but were afraid of fire? was there electricity? did they run in giant hamspter wheels to the machines? what exactly did the ma...more
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Read in March, 2008
I think I'd read this one before, but I couldn't quite remember and so read it again. I was surprised by the socio-political commentary in it - modern interpretations of the story rarely use the Traveler's own theory of evolutionary differentiation between the working class and the aristocracy as the source of the division between the Morlock and Eloi species. Very interesting. Wells' storytelling methods are noteworthy also - where today's writer would have stopped the time travelling...more
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Wells is particularly known for his science-fiction novels, the time machine included. Most probably, the book will not be considered a piece of Art by Henry James yet there are things in this novel that makes it totally different from many others of the genre. Characters are not psychologically cast but the dialouges together with the time traveller's train of thought in divining the fate of human race in the spanning time of millenia is indeed fascinatings and makes you to swing from left to r...more
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Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
Those interested in the principles of time travel/the distant future
I found this to be an interesting and readable account of a potential future from a very imaginative and intelligent man. Having a fascination with time travel, I found the 'scientific' principles behind this story intriguing, in particular his explanation of time as a fourth dimension.
I'm sure it will provide me with plenty of fodder for day dreams and a lot of things to ponder over and in this way it was a very clever book. As for the actual story (as opposed to the ideas it deals with) I...more
I'm sure it will provide me with plenty of fodder for day dreams and a lot of things to ponder over and in this way it was a very clever book. As for the actual story (as opposed to the ideas it deals with) I...more
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bookshelves:
literature
recommends it for: everyone interested in science fiction
Read in January, 2006
recommended to Cole by:
my friend Amirrecommends it for: everyone interested in science fiction
When I was in sixth grade one of my good friends, Amir, was reading a book by H.G. Wells called "The Island of Doctor Moreau". He told me that the book was very good, but that he also has written other very good novels. Taking his advice, the next day I went to Barnes and Nobles to get a book by H.G. Wells. The one that caught my eye the most was one named The Time Machine. When I got home I started to read it and I couldn't put it down. It was so good. I strongly suggest this book to ...more
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2 comments
bookshelves:
fantasy,
sci-fi
recommends it for: everyone, high schoolers, college age, anyone
Read in June, 2008
recommended to Laney by:
selfrecommends it for: everyone, high schoolers, college age, anyone
This is now one of my favorite books.
I liked this book because it was fascinating, had vivid descriptions, was easy to read, and tells a great story. I could see every detail in my head. H.G.Wells was a terrific writer with a terrific imagination. I enjoyed that it had the newest scientific findings of the day and seems so much like it could have been written today, with the exception of the old-fashioned house.
I highly recommend this book to everyone. It is so short and easy to read tha...more
I liked this book because it was fascinating, had vivid descriptions, was easy to read, and tells a great story. I could see every detail in my head. H.G.Wells was a terrific writer with a terrific imagination. I enjoyed that it had the newest scientific findings of the day and seems so much like it could have been written today, with the exception of the old-fashioned house.
I highly recommend this book to everyone. It is so short and easy to read tha...more
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Read in June, 2000
Date read is approximate. This is a very Victorian sci-fi, partly because well, that's what it is. The tone is that of the scientific report so popular at the time, more clinical and narrative than actual storytelling. It's fascinating to see Wells experiment in ways no other writer was trying at the time. You can definitely see how he influenced Doyle's work, amongst others. This isn't a great book by any means, but it;s definitely worth reading for those who want to see where genre fictio...more
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This is one of the "classics" that I did not read in school, however I was able to read it last year. As far as the nuts and bolts is concerned literature it was great. The author made good use of words and the descriptions were vivid, even for someone challanged by imagination. I approached the underground world with the same trepidation as the time traveler did. However, overall there seems to be something missing in this book, it was a good read, but not necessarily enthralling ...more
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Read in January, 2003
I read this because I wanted to catch up on all the classics that I missed in High School because I grew up in the ghetto and then in college because I never had time for personal reading.
I didn't really like it. Maybe because it wasn't the same as the movie, which I liked parts of (but hated other parts). Or maybe because it was just wierd for me. I can see parts of the new movie "I Am Legend" in it, but I actually didn't like that movie much either. Maybe I'm just not into the who...more
I didn't really like it. Maybe because it wasn't the same as the movie, which I liked parts of (but hated other parts). Or maybe because it was just wierd for me. I can see parts of the new movie "I Am Legend" in it, but I actually didn't like that movie much either. Maybe I'm just not into the who...more
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