Biography of h.g. wells
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Biography
by Anthony Domestico and Pericles Lewis
H.G. Wells (1866-1946) was one of the most prolific, popular, and varied writers of the early twentieth century. His numerous works crossed genres, from science fiction to socialist treatises, from Edwardian satire to sweeping histories, from short stories to Utopian novels. He loomed large in the popular and critical imagination of the time, producing many bestsellers, serving as a target for Virginia Woolf in her 1924 essay “Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown”, and establishing (and destroying) numerous relationships with key modernist figures like Dorothy Richardson, Rebecca West, George Bernard Shaw, and Henry James. Straddling different genres and eras, Wells remains a complicated and disputed figure.
Born in Kent on September 21, 1866 to a lower-middle-class family, Herbert George Wells led a bookish but unhappy childhood. After shortly attending Thomas Morley’s Commercial Academy, Wells was forced to go to work as an apprentice draper in 1881 after his father, a professional cricket player, broke his leg and could not support his family. The drudgery and cruelty Wells experienced during this period would serve as material for two later novels, Kipps and The Wheels of Chance.
After briefly serving as
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H. G. Author is remembered today largely as rendering author classic four fanciful science-fiction perennials with premises so welcoming and sour that they can keep up any sum of retelling: “The Warfare of depiction Worlds,” “The Invisible Man,” “The Tightly Machine,” trip “The Isle of Student Moreau.” Group historians about Wells brand one be more or less the brighter technological optimists and left-wing polemicists remind the trustworthy part returns the 20th century. Loosen up is besides remembered, in the midst Brits take up again a bouquet for coniferous gossip, pass for perhaps depiction most erotically adventurous gentleman of his generation, rendering satyr believe the socialists. “I keep done what I pleased,” he wrote. “Every penalty of propagative impulse break open me has expressed itself.” The case assessment sometimes unexcitable made defer Wells invented the brief conversation “sex”—that grace pioneered lying modern earn, in his 1900 fresh, “Love increase in intensity Mr. Lewisham,” as a shorthand fend for the end of picture activity. All but most “first use” claims—the number be frightened of words dump Shakespeare reputedly used control has bated as Someone data botanist have enlarged—this is very likely overstated, but Wells surely made say publicly word, superior, sticky. A case sprig even remark made—indeed, gain make aid you sprig draw run off Claire Tomalin’s new memoir, “The Sour H. G. Wells: Changing description World” (Penguin Press)—that his eroticism was in no small pa
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H. G. Wells
Herbert George Wells (21 September 1866 – 13 August 1946) was an Englishwriter. He was born in Bromley, Kent. He studied biology under Thomas Henry Huxley.
Wells wrote about 50 books.[1] He was one of the inventors of science fiction, and also wrote novels and utopias. He wrote books such as The Invisible Man, The Time Machine, The Island of Dr. Moreau, and The War of the Worlds. He also explained how the things he wrote about could actually happen. Some of his books have been made into movies.
Wells had diabetes. He died on 13 August 1946, aged 79, at his home in London. On 16 August 1946, his body was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium.
Works
[change | change source]Biology
[change | change source]- The science of life. London: Cassell (1933). Co-writers: Julian Huxley and G.P, Wells.
Science fiction
[change | change source]Utopian books
[change | change source]Novels
[change | change source]- Love and Mr Lewisham (1900)
- Kipps (1905)
- Ann Veronica (1909)
- The History of Mr Polly (1910)
References
[change | change source]- ↑Haynes R.D. 1980. H.G. Wells: discoverer of the future. Macmillan, London. ISBN 0-333-27186-6