
Warwick Goble's Martian War Machines, War of the Worlds 1897
Dangling tendrils hang from the base of a devastated structure like the limbs of a dying creature, drawing the eye down into smoldering ruin. Above, massive black silhouettes of Martian tripod war machines loom through billowing smoke and flame, their mechanical forms rendered in stark, expressionistic brushwork. Warwick Goble's illustration for H.G. Wells' War of the Worlds captures the alien invasion's overwhelming scale and menace, with heat-ray destruction rippling across a scorched English landscape.
Goble's vision of the Martian machines as looming, almost organic black masses is genuinely unsettling — the hanging tendrils and smoke-choked silhouettes convey an alien menace that transcends mere illustration. The split-panel composition amplifies the chaos and scale of the invasion with considerable dramatic ambition.
“Huge, black shapes moved busily to and fro.”





