The Invisible Man (novel): Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Police Are Useless]]: Averted. Jaffers the village constable in Iping is rather quick on the uptake, and Port Burdock's Colonel Adye is a pretty brave (if reckless) policeman as well. His two subordinate constables are also pretty badass, fending Griffin (who has a gun and an axe) off with fireplace pokers.
* [[Police Are Useless]]: Averted. Jaffers the village constable in Iping is rather quick on the uptake, and Port Burdock's Colonel Adye is a pretty brave (if reckless) policeman as well. His two subordinate constables are also pretty badass, fending Griffin (who has a gun and an axe) off with fireplace pokers.
* [[Professor Guinea Pig]]
* [[Professor Guinea Pig]]
* [[Red Eyes Take Warning]]
* [[Red Eyes, Take Warning]]
* [[Reign of Terror]]: Griffin says that's what he'll try to achieve in England (and the world, eventually) with those exact words.
* [[Reign of Terror]]: Griffin says that's what he'll try to achieve in England (and the world, eventually) with those exact words.
* [[Screw the Rules, I Have Supernatural Powers]]
* [[Screw the Rules, I Have Supernatural Powers]]

Revision as of 18:32, 26 January 2014

The Invisible Man is a novel by HG Wells, Trope Codifier for many Invisibility tropes. (Not to Be Confused With the novel Invisible Man (no definite article) by Ralph Ellison.)

The Invisible Man tells the story of an encounter the people of a sleepy town have with a mysterious newcomer who conceals himself entirely with bandages. The townspeople grow ever curious at the secretive, dangerously short-tempered man and his experiments. Frustrated by the inquisitive nature of the locals, the man goes into a rage, tears away his bandages, and reveals to the people that he is in fact completely invisible.

From this point on, the story follows the invisible man's trail of destruction and terror across the land as he attempts to either find a cure for his condition or take over the country (whichever is more likely).

It was made into a famous film version by Universal in 1933.


The novel provides examples of: