Warwick Goble's Martian Heat-Ray Destroys Ship, War of the Worlds 1898
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Warwick Goble's Martian Heat-Ray Destroys Ship, War of the Worlds 1898

Wells predicted directed-energy weapons with eerie accuracy — modern militaries have indeed developed laser and microwave systems — though the tripod-mounted Martian delivery system proved less practical than satellites. In this dramatic halftone wash illustration, a Martian fighting-machine unleashes its devastating heat-ray upon a vessel at sea, the beam igniting billowing clouds of black smoke and steam as the doomed ship's masts and rigging collapse into churning waves, a lone desperate figure visible amid the chaos of froth and fire.

Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Warwick Goble
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1890s
Country: United Kingdom
Coolness: 7/10

This is proto-pulp scientific romance at its most visceral — Wells's alien invasion rendered with kinetic, almost journalistic urgency. Goble captures the annihilating superiority of Martian technology over human naval power in a scene of pure spectacle that defined the invasion-fiction visual vocabulary for decades.

Text in image:

Warwick Goble

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