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Warwick Goble's Heat-Ray Blast, War of the Worlds 1898 H.G. Wells
An Edwardian reader encountering this illustration would have felt the scorching terror of unstoppable annihilation — a Martian heat-ray slashes a blinding white beam across a snow-dusted English landscape, igniting a monstrous billowing column of black smoke that devours the sky. A shattered artillery piece lies destroyed at the beam's origin point, a lone pine tree silhouetted against the chaos. Warwick Goble's loose, atmospheric watercolor technique transforms Wells's technological horror into something visceral and painterly.
Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Warwick Goble
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1890s
Country: United Kingdom
Coolness: 6/10
Goble's painterly restraint elevates this above lurid pulp spectacle — it belongs in a museum case beside the first edition. The drama is real but the execution is genuinely fine art.
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Text in image:
“WARWICK GOBLE”





