
Warwick Goble's Martian Devastation – War of the Worlds 1897
This illustration grimly predicted asymmetric warfare — a technologically superior force reducing humanity to fleeing silhouettes — though Wells and Goble imagined tripods rather than drones. Two tiny human figures are dwarfed by a scorched, cratered landscape of smoldering earth and shattered tree roots, one figure standing atop a ridge in helpless silhouette, another crouching below amid the burning wreckage. Goble's moody chiaroscuro captures the Martian heat-ray's aftermath with unsettling realism.
This is early literary science fiction illustration rather than pulp sensationalism — Goble's restrained, atmospheric approach favors dread and desolation over lurid spectacle. The horror is quiet and existential, placing it firmly in the Wells tradition of scientific romance.





