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Warwick Goble's Heat-Ray Devastation – War of the Worlds, 1897
Illustrating H.G. Wells' landmark 1898 novel 'The War of the Worlds,' this haunting image captures the Martian heat-ray scorching the English countryside. A searing beam of white light cuts through the darkness, igniting trees and brush as flames consume the foreground. Warwick Goble's atmospheric monochromatic rendering — all sepia shadow and hellish fire — conveys the helpless terror of humanity beneath an unseen alien weapon. One of the earliest visual interpretations of Wells' invasion, it remains deeply evocative.
Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Warwick Goble
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1890s
Country: United Kingdom
Coolness: 6/10
The heat-ray has spoken — and the English countryside answers in flames. Before Spielberg, before radio panic, there was Goble's quiet, creeping dread.
Tags:
invasionaliensapocalypsewarfareheat-rayMartian invasionburning landscapealien weaponfiretreelinecountrysidebeam of lightwar of the worldsH.G. WellsWarwick Gobleheat rayMartian invasionVictorian sci-fialien weaponburning countryside1890s illustrationbook illustrationBritish sci-fiearly science fiction
Text in image:
“One or two adventurous souls never returned.”





