The Time Machine and the Invisible Man
by H. G. Wells
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At a dinner party in suburban London, the Time Traveller, known to the reader only as the Eminent Scientist, speaks to his guests about the fourth dimension of space--i.e. time. He states that it is possible to travel through time much as one travels through space. The guests are not persuaded, even after seeing the Eminent Scientist's time machine itself. At a later dinner party, the scientist arrives a little late, rumpled and dirty. He tells them he has spent the equivalent of eight days in the year 802,701. He encountered the Eloi, a race of delicate gentle vegetarians who exist in an idyllic garden, and the Morlocks, who live underground and operate the machinery and industrial equipment of the world. The Eloi, in other words are descendents of capitalism, and the Morlocks are the progeny of the proletariat. The Time Traveller then hurries into the year 30,000,000, where he sees a single life form--a round, tentacled thing near the ocean. He concludes that this represents the end of life on earth.
Editions of The Time Machine and the Invisible Man
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ISBN |
Binding/Format Paperback |
Publisher New Amer Library Classics |
Date 1984 |
Price $1.00 |
![]() Used, Very Good |
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ISBN |
Binding/Format Paperback |
Publisher Barnes & Noble |
Date 2003 |
Price $1.00 |
![]() Very Good |
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ISBN |
Binding/Format Hardcover |
Publisher Sterling Pub Co Inc |
Date 2004 |
Price $2.32 |
![]() Good Condition |
Media Reviews
"'The Time Machine'...is worth reading, if you like to read impossible yarns, and though there is scarcely an effort to make the queer invention, by means of which the inventor was projected into the year 800,000 of our era, seem likely, the narrative is smartly written, and the philosophy of the thing is at once obvious (which is desirable when a story book has any philosophy) and interesting."
Synopses
A scientist invents a time machine and uses it to travel hundreds of thousands of years into the future, where he discovers the childlike Eloi and the hideous underground Morlocks.
First Line
The Time Traveller (for so it will be convenient to speak of him) was expounding a recondite matter to us.
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