H. G. Wells Invisible Man

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H. G. Wells writes a wonderful book with interesting and belivable characters, The Invisible Man, and in it shows that if a human gives himself the opportunity to get away with evil, he will. Wells’ book begins with an unknown stranger staying at an inn; however, he has his head entirely wrapped in bandages, and he wears gloves and boots, resulting in no part of him actually appearing to the outside world. He makes it clear that he does not enjoy company, and eventually, it comes out that he is invisible. That night, he robs a nearby house, and makes a clean getaway, because no one saw him commit the theft. Once the townspeople try to bring him to justice, he just walks away.
However, the invisible man, eventually revealing his name, Griffin, …show more content…

Wells spends time developing him, mainly through the extended flashback sequence in chapters XIX-XXIII. In there, he tells how he robbed his father, turned a cat invisible and left it to roam the streets, blew up his apartment room, or as he says, “[He] fired the house” (115). Dr. Kemp ranks second in the list of fleshed-out character and Wells often portrays him as a total opposite of Griffin. Where Griffin acts impulsively, Kemp plans out everything before he acts. While Griffin has an extremely short fuse, Kemp stays calm, even when he realizes that Griffin snuck into his house (88). However, he also can act brutally when necessary. He advocated throwing powdered glass on the roads once the invisible man ran away (147). Griffin could not wear shoes of any sort, because those would appear on him, so he would have to walk with bare feet on the powdered glass, or find some shoes to wear and give up his …show more content…

Even though Wells refers to it as a grotesque romance in the original publication, he only did so because the term science fiction had not yet come into common use, and romance just meant a story not rooted in reality. This story does not really fit the monomyth pattern at all. Mainly, that is because the main character’s and the antagonist’s roles merge into the same person. Griffin also does not redeam himself; he stays evil until he dies. To a point, Dr. Kemp goes through the monomyth pattern as he goes from not beliving in an invisible man, to beliving in him. Then he deals with the chalenges of trying to get him captured, and after that fails, he is reborn into a slightly less forgiving man, even suggesting the powedered glass on the road (147). He has to atone for messing up his earlier chance to capture him by trying to survive another attack by Griffin (153). Finally, at the end of the book, when Kemp holds down the invisible Griffin during a fight so someone can kill him, everything goes back to normal a few days later and Dr. Kemp has pulled through his trial

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