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H. G. Wells

H. G. Wells. Considered one of the most influential 20 th century writers. Words that describe Wells: Novelist Essayist Futurist Historian Socialist Teacher . Biographical background. B. September 21, 1866 Kent County, England Mother: Sarah Neal, maid to the upper classes

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H. G. Wells

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  1. H. G. Wells • Considered one of the most influential 20th century writers. • Words that describe Wells: • Novelist • Essayist • Futurist • Historian • Socialist • Teacher

  2. Biographical background • B. September 21, 1866 • Kent County, England • Mother: Sarah Neal, maid to the upper classes • Father: Joseph Wells, shopkeeper and professional cricket player • The Wells were very poor • Parents had troubled marriage and eventually lived apart

  3. Youth: Bookworm to Draper • Defining incident: child Herbert becomes avid reader while bedridden after breaking his leg; writing interest develops later • Attended Thomas Morley’s Academy • Father broke leg; income from playing cricket eliminated • => HG drops out of school at 14 to get a job, help support family • => Becomes apprentice to a draper (fabric & sewing supplies) • => Apprenticeship provides wealth of experience and insight that would influence much of his writing

  4. Higher Education • 1883: scholarship to London’s Normal School of Science • Studies biology and Darwinism under Thomas Henry Huxley (grandfather of Aldous Huxley, author of Brave New World) • Realizes science would serve him well in his writing • Unable to complete degree; loses scholarship • Financial hardship; moves in with Aunt and Uncle Wells • Tutors while studying part-time at uncle’s school • Graduates London University, Bachelor of Science with Honors in Zoology

  5. Troubled Relationships • 1891 marries cousin Mary; • marriage lasts 4 years • 1895 marries one of his students, Amy (Jane) Catherine Robbins; 2 sons • Numerous relations with other women while married to Jane • Two children born to Wells and two other women

  6. The Writer EmergesNovels:Common themes: • Evolution: Is human civilization advancing or degrading – physically, intellectually, ethically? • Science Progressivism: When and how much should scientific technology intervene to “improve” humanity? • Socialism: What happens when the upper classes exploit the lower classes? • The future: What would it be like to travel to the future? The moon? To meet an alien?

  7. Quotations from Wells • “History is a race between education and catastrophe.” • “Adapt or perish, now as ever, is nature's inexorable imperative.” • “If we don't end war, war will end us.” • “You have learned something. That always feels at first as if you had lost something.”

  8. The World-Renown Author • 1914: Predicted the atomic bomb • Coauthored a 3-volume reference book with his son, zoologist and author, George P. Wells, and biologist Sir Julian Huxley, The Science of Life [microbes to human life]. • Became a well-travelled celebrity, meeting with world leaders and other exceptional authors. • Died August 13, 1946 at his home in Regent’s Park, London • Though not engraved on a tombstone (his body was cremated and ashes were dispersed over the sea), he wrote his own epitaph: “I told you so. You damned fools.”

  9. Traits of Science Fiction • A setting in the future, an alternate time, or a past that is different from our actual past • A setting in space or an invented/alternate word. • Characters may be human, alien, or some of each. • Technology or scientific principles beyond current advancements or that go against current laws of natures. • Discovery or application of new scientific advances (time travel, space travel, etc). • New and different political and social systems.

  10. Bibliography • [Comic book image]. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://looky.wordpress.com/2007/02/07/ron-malletts-time-machine/ • [Black and white portrait photos]. (n.d.) Retrieved from H. G. Wells Photo Gallery, http://colemanzone.com/Time_Machine_Project/wells_pics.htm • [Antique sewing kit image]. (n.d.) http://elegantarts.com/index.php?cPath=4 • The Independent. London Street Photography. [Sepia street image with children]. Retrieved from http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/london-street-photography-2217610.html?action=Gallery&ino=16 • Merriman, C. D. “H. G. Wells.” The Literature Network. 2007. 27 March 2011. http://www.online-literature.com/wellshg/.

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