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1[[quoteright:315:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hg_wells_portrait.jpg]]
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3->''"Human history in essence is the history of ideas."''
4
5Herbert George Wells (21 September 1866 – 13 August 1946) was an English ScienceFiction writer who, along with Creator/JulesVerne, defined the genre during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and spawned many tropes, including the TimeMachine and the AlienInvasion.
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7His most famous works have been [[TheFilmOfTheBook adapted into film]] multiple times. ''The Time Machine'', ''The Island of Doctor Moreau'', ''The Invisible Man'' and ''The War of the Worlds'' are probably the best-known.
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9Many of his novels were written in the first person, narrated by a typically unnamed character. In many adaptations, ''The Time Machine'''s unnamed time-traveler is H.G. Wells himself, which has led to [[Film/TimeAfterTime other works]] using the real-life Wells as a time-traveling character.
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11In his later life, he turned more toward what he thought society should be like; fictional {{Utopia}}s and {{Dystopia}}s and nonfiction books on socialist thought alike. Though Wells thought of these works as more important, it's his early stuff that's thought of as classic, at least in part because it is generally better written. Creator/GKChesterton compared him to [[Literature/TheBible Esau]], saying that just as the latter had sold his birthright for a mess of pottage, so Wells traded his talent for a pot of message (although he was a [[HypocriticalHumor fine one to talk]]). For clarity, Wells did identify his political views as socialist, but it was a distinctly non-Marxist socialism he advocated, and hoped would prevent the violence destruction that he believed class conflict would otherwise lead to without a technologically and socially progressive international movement.
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13His life had quite the BittersweetEnding, as he was very worried about the rise of Nazism and warned that it might just lead to an apocalypse like the ones he'd written about, which can make it a relief that he lived long enough to see the end of World War II...until you realize this also means one of the last major scientific achievements he witnessed was another of his feared forecasts, the atomic bomb.
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15Often portrayed, in fiction, in BeethovenWasAnAlienSpy-style situations, involving either TimeTravel or Aliens. If they do involve time travel, he usually ends up in the modern world and becomes [[PostHistoricalTrauma very depressed]] over the fact that modern society is just as far away from his proposed utopias as his own time was. Said fictional portrayals often leave out the fact that his voice resembled an English-accented version of Creator/TexAvery's Droopy (as can be heard in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUdghSMTXsU a radio interview]] he did with Creator/OrsonWelles (no relation)).
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17It's been said that he invented almost every basic modern science fiction device except for {{alternate universe}}s. His stories, along with those of Creator/JulesVerne, are also a major influence on SteamPunk. Along with Jules Verne and Hugo Gernsback, Wells is often considered "The Father of Science Fiction".
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19In many ways, the works of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells are polar opposites. Verne paid particular attention to technological realism, making him perhaps the world's first hard science fiction author; but he paid little heed to the social ramifications of such technology, projecting 19th century Europe into the future indefinitely. Wells, on the other hand, cared little if his proposed inventions violated every known law of science, but he was keenly interested in how society would change and pulled no punches when it came to civilization's impermanence.
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21He is also considered a founding father of commercial [[WarGaming wargames]]. He and some of his adult friends started playing with toy soldiers, and starting codifying rules. He felt it was better than fighting a real war, because "Tin soldiers don't leave behind tin widows and tin orphans." Wells eventually published ''Little Wars'' which contains the story of the creation of the game, the many balance and GameBreaker issues they ran into, and a suggested set of large scale miniature rules. ''Little Wars'' is still required reading for prospective game designers. Another over-looked aspect of his life is that in his 'middle period' from around 1900-1920 he authored fiction that mostly lacked any science-fiction elements, such as ''Anne Veronica'', ''The History of Mr. Polly'', and ''Kipps'', which was later adapted into the London and Broadway musical hit ''Theatre/HalfASixpence''.
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23It's probably also worth mentioning that the man [[ReallyGetsAround was extremely popular with the ladies]]. The Other Wiki lists six confirmed lovers in addition to his two wives, and he probably managed quite a few others. Considering his bibliography runs to around 50 novels and a similar number of non-fiction works, he was clearly a master of [[StealthPun time management]]. [[Literature/TheTimeMachine Hey, wait a second...]]
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25As one of the founders of science fiction, he often shows up in modern sci-fi works as a HistoricalDomainCharacter.
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27----
28!!Works by H. G. Wells with their own trope pages include:
29[[index]]
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31* ''Literature/TheFirstMenInTheMoon''
32* ''Literature/TheInvisibleMan''
33* ''Literature/TheIslandOfDoctorMoreau''
34* ''Film/TheManWhoCouldWorkMiracles'' (film adaptation, whose script Wells contributed to.)
35* ''Literature/TheSeaLady''
36* ''Literature/TheShapeOfThingsToCome''
37* ''Literature/TheSleeperAwakes''
38* ''Literature/AStoryOfTheStoneAge''
39* ''Literature/TheTimeMachine''
40* ''Literature/{{The War of the Worlds|1898}}''
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42[[/index]]
43
44!!Other works by H. G. Wells provide examples of:
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46%%* AdaptationDecay: Films made from his work often suffer from this. Two particularly flagrant examples by Creator/BertIGordon are ''The Empire of the Ants'' and ''Film/TheFoodOfTheGods''.%%ZCE -- how are they examples?
47* AdaptationExpansion: The 1936 film version of ''The Man Who Could Work Miracles'', whose script Wells contributed to, expands on the adventures of the eponymous George [=McWhirter=] Fotheringay (and gives an explicit source to his sudden powers).
48* AttackOfTheKillerWhatever:
49** "The Empire of the Ants" has an army of intelligent, unstoppable (albeit normal-sized) ants that are slowly but relentlessly conquering the Amazon region of South America; the narrator ends with a prediction that they'll reach Europe within a few decades.
50** Also packs of predatory squid-creatures in "The Sea Raiders" and migrating spiders in, well, "The Valley of the Spiders".
51* AuthorFilibuster: At one point in ''Kipps'', the narrator interrupts a scene to deliver a monologue chiding the reader and setting out Wells's social and political views.
52-->What is the good of keeping up the idyllic sham and pretending that ill-educated, misdirected people "get along very well," and that all this is harmlessly funny and nothing more? You think I'm going to write fat, silly, grinning novels about half-educated, under-trained people and keep it up all the time, that the whole thing's nothing but funny! As I think of them lying unhappily there in the darkness, my vision pierces the night. See what I can see! Above them, brooding over them, I tell you there is a monster, a lumpish monster, like some great, clumsy griffin thing, like the Crystal Palace labyrinthodon, like Coote, like the leaden goddess Dulness Pope Abhorred, like some fat, proud flunkey, like pride, like indolence, like all that is darkening and heavy and obstructive in life. It is matter and darkness, it is the anti-soul, Stupidity. My Kippses live in its shadow.
53* TheBadGuyWins: "The Empire of the Ants" ends with the ants completely overtaking the Amazon and a grim prediction that they will overrun the rest of the world in decades at most.
54* BugWar: "The Empire of the Ants", though the ants are far from a mindless swarm, which is what makes them so lethally dangerous.
55%%* BoobyTrap: The poisonous thorns attached to "The Treasure in the Forest".
56* CityInABottle: "The Country of the Blind" is about a mountaineer who, while visiting Ecuador, stumbles upon a lost population of people living in a valley that has been cut off from the rest of the world. Thanks to a disease that rendered their citizens blind and unable to produce sighted children, the entire population is now sightless. They have no concept of how vision works -- and no idea of what eyes are for. The visitor thinks, because of his extra sense, that he will be able to easily take over the valley, but it turns out the villagers' ''other'' senses have [[DisabilitySuperpower compensated for their loss of vision]] and they remain virtually unimpaired. (They also regard his "vision" as something of a curse, which is driving him crazy, and decide there is only [[EyeScream one medically sound solution]].)
57* CruelAndUnusualDeath: "The Cone" has a man being thrown on top of a blast furnace.
58* DrunkWithPower: Fotheringay gets more and more extravagant with his wishes. It ends very badly.
59* TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt:
60** The passing of "The Star" through the Solar System inflicts this on humanity, stopping just short of an EarthShatteringKaboom.
61** As implied by the title, "A Dream of Armageddon" has a character relating his vivid vision of a future world being consumed by global war.
62* ExactWords: In "The Truth about Pyecraft" the fat Pyecraft drinks an Indian potion which promotes "Loss of Weight". (The narrator describes it as "committing the sin of euphemism".) Instead of making him thinner the potion decreases his mass, making his body behave like a balloon. Since the lift of a man-sized balloon cannot be as strong as described, even for a very fat man, his gravitational mass may have become negative.
63* ForScience: Sort of the attitude of the protagonists of "The New Accelerator"; as the story ends, they are rather casually preparing to mass-produce and sell a product which will likely upend human society in countless ways. (See below under "Super Speed".)
64* GodGuise: "Jimmy Goggles the God" has a character unwillingly becoming the god of a tribe of rather xenophobic tropical natives thanks to the primitive diving suit he's wearing when he encounters them. ("Jimmy Goggles" is the nickname that the suit is given before the encounter.)
65* GrailInTheGarbage: "The Crystal Egg" turns up in a obscure second-hand store before being lost again, at least as far as the narrator and reader are concerned.
66* GreatBigLibraryOfEverything: ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Brain World Brain]]'' is a series of essays and lectures Wells wrote in the 1930s, arguing humanity should build a version of this combined with a radically transformed education system, albeit with more durable storage media (Wells suggested microfilm) than leather, ink and bound paper.
67* HeAlsoDid: Most famous for his science fiction, Wells also wrote numerous novels and short stories with no fantastical elements whatsoever, along with ''Little Wars'', a treatise on war gaming, and the aforementioned ''World Brain'' essays on humanity’s need for a “universal library”.
68* ImportedAlienPhlebotinum: The narrator speculates that "The Crystal Egg" is an example of this, sent from Mars to allow that planet's inhabitants to (evidently idly) view life on Earth.
69%%* KarmicDeath: The protagonists in "The Treasure in the Forest".
70* LiteralGenie: In "The Man Who Could Work Miracles" has numerous examples of this, culminating in Fotheringay ordering the sun to not set. The wish-granting force, whatever it is, accomplishes this by abruptly halting the Earth's rotation. Just the Earth itself, not [[ApocalypseHow anything currently on the Earth's surface]].
71* LookOnMyWorksYeMightyAndDespair: A recurring theme in Wells's work is that while technology represents some of the best aspects of humanity, it can just as easily be our undoing if used unwisely.
72* MagicMeteor: ''In the Days Of The Comet'' (1906) is about a comet smothering the planet in green vapours which renders everyone euphoric and pacifist.
73* ManEatingPlant: "The Flowering of the Strange Orchid" describes a an exotic orchid that overwhelms victims with its powerful odor, knocking them out, before drinking their blood.
74%%* TheMissionary: One appears at the end of "Jimmy Goggles the God".
75%%* OurGhostsAreDifferent: "The Inexperienced Ghost"
76* PerpetualMotionMachine: "A Tale of the Twentieth Century" is a humourous short story about a train that gets converted into one. Unfortunately, the brakes don't work...
77* RealityWarper: George [=McWhirter=] Fotheringay, the title character in the short story "The Man Who Could Work Miracles" does [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin exactly what it says he does.]] He discovers that he possesses virtually unlimited magic power, but has no understanding of how it works.
78* RealityWarpingIsNotAToy: In "The Man Who Could Work Miracles", George Fotheringay discovers he can work miracles; he can wish anything to happen and it does. [[spoiler:He wishes the sun to not set, causing the Earth's rotation to instantly stop, sending everything on the planet's surface flying. He wishes to survive this, then very carefully wishes for a ResetButton back to the moment he discovered his powers and that he wouldn't have them.]]
79* ResetButton: After the LiteralGenie incident above, Fotheringay ''very'' carefully makes one last wish that results in this.
80* SacrificialPlanet: Neptune gets destroyed in "The Star". At the very end, Earth essentially becomes this, at least as far as observing Martian astronomers are concerned.
81* ShownTheirWork: a number of his works, both science fiction and otherwise, involve plot elements and details that are accurate to the day's science. In certain cases this can be easy to miss from a modern perspective, such as ''The Time Machine'''s depiction of a far-future Earth baked by a dying, bloated Sun (based on then-cutting-edge theoretical work on star life cycles).
82* SpiritualSuccessor: "The Shape of Things to Come" to "The War in the Air", bordering on a StealthSequel. The first part of the former is essentially a BroadStrokes reworking of the final part of the latter, accounting for {{Science|MarchesOn}} and {{Technology|MarchesOn}} marching on.
83* SuperSpeed: As noted, "The New Accelerator" depicts the narrator helping a scientist test the latter's new formula that induces this ability in humans.
84* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome: Despite the comparisons between him and Verne above, his story "The New Accelerator" attempts to realistically show the dangers that would result if someone were to develop the ability to move at super-speed. (ie, clothes catching on fire due to the friction.)
85* TankGoodness: The UrExample in modern fiction can be found in Wells's short story "The Land Ironclads", which foresaw the tank's paradigm-shifting impact on warfare. Among the predictions is the potential for (newly invented at the time) [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedrail_wheel Pedrail wheels]] to allow massive armed and armored vehicles to [[TheJuggernaut unstoppably plow over men and defenses alike]]. Though the pedrails would be replaced by caterpillar tracks and the steam engines replaced with petrol, the idea of a [[MightyGlacier plodding armored behemoth]] would [[UsefulNotes/WorldWarOne soon come to real life.]]
86* TreasureMap: One appears in "The Treasure in the Forest".
87* TropeNamer: He coined the first incarnation of what would later become the phrase "TheWarToEndAllWars", in a series of newspaper articles he wrote in August 1914 that were collected into the brochure ''The War That Will End War''.
88* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture: "The War in the Air" was written in 1907 and takes place in the late 1910s.
89* UnexpectedlyRealMagic: The short story ''The Man Who Could Work Miracles'' centers on one George Fotheringay, a nondescript fellow who's been both unremarkable and a skeptic into his thirties. While debating with comrades at a bar, Fotheringay commands a table candle to levitate inverted, and its flame burn downwards as well. To everyone's astonishment, the candle and flame do precisely that. His sudden RealityWarper powers unnerve Fotheringay, though he later conducts further trials of his newfound powers.
90** In ''The Magic Shop'' the father soon notices that the magic is not a sly trick.
91* WeightLossHorror: PlayedForLaughs in "The Truth About Pyecraft". A very fat man takes a potion to lose weight. And he does — but he doesn't actually become thinner. He just weighs less until he's floating up on the ceiling of his bedroom like a large balloon.

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