Herbert George Wells was born on September 21, 1866 in Bromley, Kent. Wells was an English author, political philosopher, sociologist, and historian. He was educated at the Normal School of Science in London, where he won a scholarship. Herbert worked as a draper’s apprentice, bookkeeper, tutor, and journalist until 1895, when he became a full-time author. Wells married his cousin, Isabel Mary Wells in 1891, but in 1894 he ran off with Amy Catherine Robbins. She was a former pupil and in 1895, she became his second wife. He had a 10 year relationship with Rebecca West.
That relationship produced one son, Anthony, in 1914. During his long life, Herbert was deeply concerned with and wrote about the survival of modern society. For some time he was a member of the Fabian Society. He imagined a perfect world in which the vast and frightening material forces available to modern men and women would be reasonably controlled for progress, and for the equal good of all. His later works were increasingly pessimistic. His book ’42 to ’44 punished most world leaders of this period.
Mind at the End of Its Tether expressed the author’s doubts about the ability of humankind to survive. Wells also wrote An Experiment in Autobiography in 1934. Herbert George Wells was most famous for his science-fiction novels with their predictive images. The Time Machine mingled science, adventure, and political comment. It was written in 1895. Some of his later works in this era were The Invisible Man in 1897, The War of the Worlds in 1898, and The Shape of Things to Come in 1933. Each of these three fantasies was made into a motion picture. Wells also wrote novels devoted to character figuration.
The Essay on The texts, Othello by William Shakespeare, Big World by Tim Winton
The texts, Othello by William Shakespeare, Big World by Tim Winton and my visual appropriation, have enriched my understanding of the outsider through a variety of language and visual techniques. Through the portrayal of Othello and Roderigo in Othello, the author in Big World and the outsider in my visual appropriation, the authors have conveyed the notion that outsiders will forever and always ...
Two of these novels were Kipps, written in 1905, and The History of Mr. Polly in 1910. The first published book by Wells was Textbook of Biology in 1893. His first novel was The Time Machine, which was immediately successful. Some of his other science-fiction works were, The Wonderful Visit, The Island of Doctor Moreau, The Invisible Man, and The First Men in the Moon. Herbert also wrote short stories, as in The Stolen Bacillus, The Plattner Story, and Tales of Space and Time. Herbert George Wells passed away on August l3, 1946.
He was one of the greatest visionaries and novel authors of all time. Being born in 1866, it is not surprising H. G. Wells’ writings are still popular today.