
Alvim Corrêa's Martian Stalks Earth, War of the Worlds 1906
Predating radar, jet aircraft, and atomic warfare by decades, this haunting pen-and-ink vision imagined alien invasion as a lurching, predatory horror rather than the sleek spacecraft of later sci-fi. Belgian artist Henrique Alvim Corrêa renders a grotesque, hunched Martian figure striding purposefully across a desolate landscape, its massive domed head cradled against its body, conveying both alien intelligence and visceral menace. The scratchy, atmospheric linework perfectly captures H.G. Wells' original vision of cold, pitiless alien minds regarding Earth with envious eyes.
This is literary weird fiction at its finest — not garish pulp spectacle but deeply unsettling scientific romance illustration. Corrêa's Martian exudes the cold biological horror Wells intended, placing this squarely in the tradition of early speculative fiction rather than later space opera excess.
“Alvin Correa”





