
Henrique Alvim Corrêa – Martian Devastation Seen from River, War of the Worlds 1906
Subverting the triumphalist spectacle typical of invasion narratives, this quietly devastating pen-and-ink scene depicts the aftermath of Martian destruction rather than the attack itself. A lone survivor paddles a small boat past a flooded, ruined settlement — collapsed structures, scattered debris, and bare trees speak to civilizational collapse. The restraint amplifies the horror: no tripods, no heat-rays, just the eerie stillness of a world already lost. Alvim Corrêa's loose, expressionistic linework captures grief and desolation with journalistic immediacy.
The illustration packs profound narrative weight into understated imagery — total civilizational ruin conveyed through a single solitary figure on a flooded river. The drama is internal and atmospheric rather than explosive, making it quietly powerful rather than viscerally pulpy.
“Hlva. Corrêa”





