The Time Machine, H. G. Wells
The Time Machine, H. G. Wells
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The Time Machine

Author: H. G. Wells

Narrator: Doushu

Unabridged: 3 hr 15 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: HongMei Zhou

Published: 04/23/2026


Synopsis

The Time Machine is H. G. Wells's masterpiece of scientific romance—the book that invented the time travel genre and helped create modern science fiction.
An unnamed inventor, the Time Traveller, has built a machine that can move through the fourth dimension. He demonstrates it to a group of skeptical Victorian gentlemen, then vanishes. When he finally returns—battered, haunted, and exhausted—he tells them an extraordinary tale.
He has traveled to the year 802,701 AD. There, humanity has split into two species. Above ground live the Eloi—beautiful, childlike, and idle, spending their days in play. Below ground, in the darkness, lurk the Morlocks—ape-like creatures who emerge at night to prey on their fragile cousins.
The Time Traveller soon discovers that his time machine has been stolen—dragged into the Morlocks' underground world. To return home, he must descend into darkness, fighting for his survival against creatures that are no longer human. And when he ventures even further into the distant future, to the dying days of Earth itself, he witnesses something far more terrible: the cold, silent end of all life.
Published in 1895, The Time Machine is a brilliant work of social satire, disguised as an adventure story. Wells uses the future to critique the class divisions of his own Victorian England—imagining a world where the privileged have evolved into fragile, helpless creatures, and the working class into brutal predators.
This is the book that inspired countless time travel stories that followed, from Doctor Who to Back to the Future. Kingsley Amis wrote of Wells: "None of his successors has yet matched the power and range and authority of his imagination."
This audiobook is based on the 1895 public domain text. Produced and narrated by Doushu, with AI assistance.

About H. G. Wells

Herbert George Wells, better known as H. G. Wells, was a novelist, journalist, sociologist, and historian who wrote over 100 books. His novels are among the classic works of science fiction. His works, which go beyond ordinary adventure stories, are thought-provoking, forcing the reader to examine the future of mankind.

Wells was born in Bromley, Kent, in 1866. His father was a shopkeeper and a professional cricketer until he broke his leg. Wells studied biology at the Normal School of Science in London and later taught in several private schools. In 1893, he became a full-time writer. He married one of his brightest students, Amy Catherine, in 1895.

Wells earned his reputation with a string of science fiction novels, including The Time Machine, The Island of Dr. Moreau, and The Invisible Man. In 1938, his realistic portrayal of a martian invasion in The War of the Worlds caused a panic across the United States when it was performed as a radio broadcast by actor Orson Wells. His science fiction stories have since become some of the most filmed works of all time.

Between the two world wars, Wells lived mainly in France. Beyond his literary career, he was the president of an international peace organization (PEN) from 1934 to 1946. In this capacity, he had discussions with both Stalin and Roosevelt, trying to recruit them to his world-saving schemes. However, he later became disillusioned with the cause of peace when global war broke out for the second time in a generation. Throughout the Second World War, Wells lived in his house on Regent's Park, refusing to let the blitz drive him out of London. He died there on August 13, 1946.


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