Saturday 13 September 2014

The Time Machine - H. G. Wells

RATING: FIVE STARS

When a mysterious and brilliant scientist creates a machine capable of travelling straight through time, he desires nothing more than to shoot into the distant future and see the wonders mankind creates as our science grows ever more sophisticated. He heads tens of thousands of years forward through time and can’t believe what he found: humans have degenerated into simple-minded animals of pleasure and apathy; our once great cities have long since crumbled in ruins.

Yet the world he found is even stranger than it first seemed and, after his time machine is stolen, the Time Traveller quickly realises it's not the paradise he had thought it was! The Morlocks, another division of humans, dwell in the old sewers and caverns beneath our cities. They are predatory and dangerous, true predators with an animal’s intelligent cunning. He must find and retrieve his time machine if he ever hopes to return home, but knows that this will be far from easy . . .

The Good
The Time Machine is certainly worthy of its fame and is one of the best science fiction books I've ever read! H. G. Wells has written it masterfully, with a true flair of imaginative talent and the story kept me gripped even though I was more than familiar with from watching various cinematic adaptations.

I also really enjoyed reading Wells' explanations of the science behind the book, even though it's wrong more often than not! Obliviously, Wells is from a more cultured, less knowledgeable time so it's easy to forgive this and the theories scientists once held are fascinating. My favourite of these is Wells' description of the lifecycle of the sun, which is apparently cooling down with every passing second. Over tens of millions of years, Wells believed that it would go out like a candle if not for the fact that all of the planets eventually drifted back to where they came from and provided an extra mass of fuel (which extends its life)!

It was nice to read about the quiet, privileged life gentlemen once enjoyed in England and Wells gives a real sense of what this was like. It really highlighted how many of the social problems we have now weren't an issue back then and it’s a shame we haven’t stuck to the values that the British were once famous for!

The Bad
I have little to fault with The Time Machine aside from one scene where the mysterious Time Traveller finds that Weena, his friend and companion in the future Earth, had been taken by the Morlocks. He simply assumes that she has been killed or left in the forest by the Morlocks and makes absolutely no effort to find out what happened or rescue her! This was a disappointing hole in the story for me and I considered the protagonist to be rather heartless ever since, which meant that I couldn't really warm to him. I like to imagine him going back to the future to rescue Weena (with it actually being the Time Travellers who snatches her in the forest so he can take her to safety), but Wells never develops this and what the Time Traveller does next is not part of the story!

My Thoughts
The Time Machine is definitely one of the great works of science fiction and it's essential in the education of anyone who enjoys the genre. It's imaginative, full of the Time Travellers curiosity and I've no doubt that people will still be reading it long after other famous book of our time have been forgotten and lost.

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