
Henrique Alvim Corrêa's Desperate Survivor, War of the Worlds 1906
In the shadow of industrialization and imperial anxiety, H.G. Wells' Martian invasion tapped Edwardian Britain's dread of technological annihilation — a fear Corrêa renders with visceral intimacy. A disheveled man crouches in rubble, head buried in his hands, overwhelmed by the devastation surrounding him. Industrial chimneys and shattered walls loom in the background, smoke curling through a blasted cityscape. This pen-and-ink masterwork from the landmark 1906 Belgian edition captures the psychological devastation of Wells' survivors with extraordinary expressionist urgency.
Though emotionally powerful, this illustration leans toward literary expressionism rather than pulp spectacle — the horror is psychological and implied, not visceral or action-driven. Its restrained, intimate composition marks it as high-art book illustration rather than lurid pulp fare.
“AC”





