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The War of the Worlds
The War of the Worlds
Jan 17, 2026 8:41 AM

Author:H G Wells,Brian Aldiss,Andy Sawyer

The War of the Worlds

'The classic tale of alien invasion, and still the best' The Times

The first modern depiction of extra-terrestrials attacking the earth, The War of the Worlds remains one of the most influential of all science-fiction works. It shows the whole of human civilization under threat, as terrifying, tentacled Martians land in England, build gigantic killing machines, destroy all in their path with black gas and burning rays and feast on the warm blood of trapped, still-living human prey. The forces of the Earth, however, may prove harder to beat than they at first appear.

Edited by Patrick Parrinder with an Introduction by Brian Aldiss and Notes by Andy Sawyer

Reviews

A masterpiece

—— Stefan Zweig

Exquisite.

—— Kate Clanchy , Guardian

Emotionally acute, profoundly beautiful, as droll as it is deep... this has to be one of the smartest novels that 2018 has to offer.

—— Hephzibah Anderson , Mail on Sunday

A gentle, bleak, and brilliant novel.

—— Jon Day , Financial Times

Immensely powerful.

—— Alex Clark , New Statesman

This intense, taut, sad and often beautiful tale may well be Barnes’ best novel for years.

—— Lara Feigel , Spectator

A tender and heartbreaking novel.

—— Alex Preston , Observer

As quiet and aching and intimate as a James Blake ballad.

—— Rupert Goold

A sensitive look at what makes lovers tick.

—— Robbie Millen , The Times

A vivid dramatization of the narcissism of obsessive love.

—— Economist

Cunningly crafted and sharply observed.

—— Anthony Cummins , Daily Mail

Barnes writes with shattering emotional acuity. The moments of pure devastation pile up, the story crushing with increasing weight as it unfurls.

—— Lucy Scholes , Independent

An utterly devastating masterpiece of a novel.

—— Anne Cunningham , Irish Independent

At once understated and dazzling. Which perhaps sums [Barnes] up, the dazzle lying not in the shimmer of individual sentences so much as in the curves and vaults of his structural decisions.

—— Michael Gorra , New York Review of Books

A quietly harrowing novel about the complexity of love and the slipperiness of memory.

—— The Week

Distils some of the pandemonium, and intergenerational conflict, of our own uncertain time.

—— Max Lin , i

Barnes gives us a novel that asks the profoundest questions about memory, love and human existence.

—— Lindsay MacPherson and Ben Felsenburg , Harrods Magazine

What begins as a witty tale of rebellion against bourgeois norms becomes a moving meditation on love. Once again Barnes shows off his skill at getting to the heart of a human heart.

—— Fanny Blake , Woman & Home

Deeply affecting and profoundly philosophical, The Only Story is a novel by an author at the height of his technical powers.

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Sunday Express

Barnes' knowing combination of humour and seriousness makes [The Only Story] ... a persuasive universal romance.

—— Lindsay Duguid , Tablet

A beautiful, tragic and poignant novel.

—— Huston Gilmore , Daily Express

In this year’s hottest new releases.

—— The Week **Best Books 2018**

Tender, wise and beautifully written, this is sad and deeply moving stuff from Barnes. Highly recommended.

—— Olaf Tyaransen , Hot Press

Affecting.

—— Paddy Kehoe , RTE Online

A brave and expansive work, compellingly told.

—— Susan Byron , Catholic Herald

A thoroughly rewarding book – a compassionate, touching and funny account… A profound book, it compels one to think about one’s own life.

—— Richard Hopton , Country & Town House

A brilliant, rueful look at love.

—— Tom Gliatto , People Magazine

Moving, funny, with ingenious emotional intelligence, it’s one to read and read again.

—— Craig Brown , Mail on Sunday, **Books of the Year**

Barnes’s novel chronicles their romance with an austere tenderness

—— Jane Shilling , Daily Mail

[Barnes’s] facility for writing artfully conceived and executed novels about unfulfilled, disappointed lives has risen to almost unassailable heights.

—— Alastair Mabbott , Herald

Julian Barnes writes shockingly well about emotion… The Only Story is devastating and wonderful.

—— Victoria Hislop , Good Housekeeping

A solemn-ish meditation on the fallibility of memory… A love story – bitter and sweet in parts – unfurls.

—— Monocle

Strange, unsettling — eerily beautiful, discomfiting, stay-up-late-addictive, sometimes hair-raising... Always, it’s Hadley’s high-res magnification on the interplay of marital (and friendship, and parental) dynamics that supplies her work’s steady gold.

—— Joan Frank , San Francisco Chronicle

[Hadley’s] prose is a form of civilised conversation... Late in the Day is a very good novel indeed… [Hadley] knows when to let silence speak, and she has the rare gift of writing dialogue which both rings true and hints at what had been left unsaid but is keenly and sometimes painfully felt.

—— Allan Massie , Scotsman

A clever, compassionate novel that sings to the possibility of renewal in late middle-age.

—— Claire Allfree , Daily Mail

[A] splendid, perceptive book… Hadley has expertly examined the complications and intimacies of marriage and family in such novels as The Past, The Master Bedroom and Clever Girl. In Late in the Day she continues her persistent exploration of human frailty and resilience, moving easily between the present and the past to reveal the hard edges and silent compromises that shape all relationships.

—— Minneapolis Star Tribune

Her prose has the penetrating quality of Henry James at his most accessible… and is alert, as Virginia Woolf and Elizabeth Bowen were, to how time sculpts, warps or casually destroys us... A quiet triumph.

—— Michael Upchurch , Seattle Times

Late in the Day is confident, brilliant, dark and interesting.

—— Iona McLaren , Daily Telegraph

Tessa Hadley’s brilliant new novel – an event that always sparks joy… [– is an] elegantly written, ironically witty book… [Hadley] is constantly being favourably compared to Virginia Woolf – as well as Jane Austen and Henry James.

—— Jackie McGlone , Herld Scotland

This is not a novel filled with incident, its pleasures are perception, insight and the intense examination of emotions… A very grown-up read.

—— Eithne Farry , Sunday Express

Tessa Hadley’s compelling new novel, Late in the Day, is a subtle, delicate evocation of modern lifeHadley’s observation is pin-sharp: whether describing a contemporary student’s house, a late-night drive, or simply a quiet room with only the reading light turned on, there is a shapely intelligence at workThere is something of Iris Murdoch’s fierce attention to the physical here.

—— Philip Womack , Independent

Tessa Hadley has become literary fiction’s chronicler-in-chief of the lives and loves of the English middle classes… Conveying their lifestyle with shrewd economy… Hadley relies on patient, persuasive observation to draw us into a satisfying family drama of hopes and regrets as viewed from the fag end of middle age.

—— Anthony Cummins , Metro

Tessa Hadley’s great success as a novelist lies inexamining her characters with an unusual degree of psychological subtlety. Her particular strength is to combine a deep excavation of human frailty with compassion for its effects.

—— Andrew Motion , Guardian

Clever and thoughtful… [Late in the Day] is wholly impressive.

—— Ella Walker , UK Press Syndication

Hadley… [is] authoritative and powerful… a complex story structure juxtaposing present and past and featuring carefully timed revelations.

—— Michele Roberts , Tablet

This is the perfect example of domestic fiction done well… Hadley's prose is measured, spare and utterly perceptive of the human condition.

—— Culture Calling

Extraordinarily skilled and penetrating.

—— Philip Hensher , i

The language is poetic and beautifully crafted… [and it] is the measured intimacy of Hadley's language that allows her to capture in so few words, the whirring emotions that stir beyond the surface.

—— Mancunion

Crisp, considered prose.

—— Franklin Nelson , Cherwell Newspaper

Exquisitely written… A slow burn that’s as elegant as it is crushingly emotional.

—— Sunday Powell , Sunday Telegraph

Late in the Day… [is] beautifully written with moments of real tenderness — I found it immensely enjoyable and thought-provoking.

—— Sharon White , Financial Times, *Summer Reads of 2019*

A wonderfully involving, intelligent and subtle.

—— Sunday Times, *Summer Reads of 2019*

One of the best literary offerings so far this year.

—— UK Press Syndication, *Summer Reads of 2019*

A prime study of the modern condition.

—— Conrad Landin , Camden New Journal

Tessa Hadley is one of those rare authors who keep getting better and better… the writing is joyous, and the conclusion will set your heart singing.

—— Stephanie Cross , Daily Mail, *Books of the Year*

Hadley’s prose is so elegant, her quiet observations on ageing, adultery, motherhood and art so penetrating, it is pure reading pleasure.

—— i

Unflinching, intelligent and fascinating

—— Marian Keyes

Hadley’s elegant sentence-making is pure joy, combining scathing observation with careful compassion in a novel.

—— Claire Allfree , Metro, *Books of the Year*

A stunning read by a masterly writer.

—— Emma Lee-Potter , Daily Express

Late in the Day will delight fans of Tessa’s work and is an excellent introduction to her style for those unfamiliar with her novels. It’s a gentle yet impactful and deeply thought-provoking book that will leave you reflecting on your own choices and relationships – and makes a perfect beginning to a new year of reading.

—— Charlotte Griffiths , Cambridge Edition

A brilliant, beautiful novel populated by multifaceted characters and lit by Hadley's insight and skill.

—— BN1

Reflective, poignant and beautifully written, it reminds us that the constant in life is change.

—— Jane Shilling , Daily Mail

Compelling.

—— Eithne Farry , Daily Mirror

[A] compelling novel… Hadley captures the way old feelings, longings and hidden secrets unravel tight-knit relationships.

—— Andreina Cordani and Eithne Farry , Daily Express
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