Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 5 de may. de 2020 · H. G. Wells’ The War of the Worlds was first published in 1897 with illustrations by the British artist Warwick Goble. These were inky, black-and-white depictions of Wells’ story of a Martian invasion — eerie, imaginative, exciting, and thoroughly of their late Victorian time.

  2. 22 de feb. de 2013 · The War of the Worlds. By Maria Popova. Beloved mid-century illustrator Edward Gorey — grim alphabetician, masterful letter-writer, dispenser of visual snark, semi-secret sort-of-pornographer — was born on this day in 1925.

  3. H.G. WellsWar of the Worlds has ter­ri­fied and fas­ci­nat­ed read­ers and writ­ers for decades since its 1898 pub­li­ca­tion and has inspired numer­ous adap­ta­tions.The most noto­ri­ous use of Wells’ book was by Orson Welles, whom the author called “my lit­tle name­sake,” and whose 1938 War of the Worlds Hal­loween radio play caused ...

  4. The War of the Worlds on Pod­cast: How H.G. Wells and Orson Welles Riv­et­ed A Nation. Orson Welles Meets H.G. Wells in 1940: The Leg­ends Dis­cuss War of the Worlds, Cit­i­zen Kane, and WWII. H.G. Wells Inter­views Joseph Stal­in in 1934; Declares “I Am More to The Left Than You, Mr. Stal­in”

  5. The original conceptual drawings for the fighting machines, drawn by Warwick Goble, accompanied the initial appearance of The War of the Worlds in Pearson's Magazine in 1897. When Wells saw these pictures, he was so displeased that he added the following text for the novel's hardcover appearance:

  6. Illustrating Wells. The War of the Worlds appeared in its illustrated form in Pearson’s and Cosmopolitan from January to December, 1897. Some of the images were republished in the American single volume of 1898, but in Britain the first book edition, again in a single volume, was without Goble’s imagery. Thereafter his contribution sank ...

  7. 11 de dic. de 2017 · Artists |. December 11, 2017. ‘War of the Worlds’ was written in 1898 by H.G. Wells. The novel, in which Martians land in the English county of Surrey, is widely credited as having popularized the alien-invaders concept.