
La Máquina del Tiempo
3.89
567,115 valoraciones·19,550 reseñas
"He vivido una experiencia asombrosa..." Así comienza el relato de primera mano del Viajero en el Tiempo sobre su increíble viaje 800.000 años más allá de su propia época: la historia que lanzó la exitosa carrera de H.G. Wells y le valió su reputación como el padre de la ciencia ficción. Con un salt...
- páginas
- 118
- Format
- Paperback
- Publicado
- 2002-10-01
- Editorial
- Signet Classics
Sobre el autor

H.G. Wells
100 libros · 0 seguidores
Herbert George Wells was born to a working class family in Kent, England. Young Wells received a spotty education, interrupted by several illnesses and family difficulties, and became a draper's apprentice as a teenager. The headmaster of Midhurst Grammar School, where he had spent a year, arranged for him to return as...
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Calificación y Reseña
What do you think?
Reseñas de la comunidad
19,550 reseñas3.9
567,115 valoraciones
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
Federico DN·1 years ago
To the future and beyond. A group of people is greatly preoccupied by the absence of one of their friends. And serious concerns arise over his pitiful state when he finally returns to his home, raddled and haggard. The Time Traveler has been in the year 802,701 AD, and he has quite a story to tell.This was good! Great even, maybe. Tbh I’m not fan of HG Wells style of writing, but can’t understate the importance of this writing, being one of the first ever recorded works of time travel and all....
Fergus, Weaver of Autistic Webs·2 years ago
I read this story in 1962, after Miss Stearns (of blessed memory) read some Wells to us kids in seventh grade. Wow. I had suddenly had picked up the Sci-Fi/Fantasy Bug. BIG time!That was when my disease - reading - got terminal, with this one book which Mom brought to me at age eleven (invalidated for a week with a head cold) from our Police Village public library which she ran.Can you imagine, my MOM (bless her, too, in the hereafter, Lord) purposefully gave me a terminal disease?***No joke - I...
Luís·5 years ago
There you go. This work is a minor SF classic. I am learning more and more to tame this genre, and I tell myself that knowing the basics is quite good. Hence, I found my interest in this book at a flea market. What a journey! A book that reads well on its own. And what I especially liked was Wells' clever writing. He doesn't take his readers down and makes concepts very accessible, which could put them off. I take as an example the introduction, which includes the idea of the 4th dimension. Even...
Sean Barrs ·7 years ago
I like science fiction that makes me imagine. Ray Bradbury’s writing is a fantastic example. His fiction is imaginative; yet, it remains speculative. Nothing feels forced or impossible. The Time Machine, on the other hand, feels synthetic and false. I just could not buy into the story here. It is so very underwhelming. It’s one of those pieces of writing in which the idea behind it causes the work to be celebrated but the actual thing itself, the language, the plot and the characters, are as dul...
J.L. Sutton·8 years ago
Surely an oversight that I hadn't read H.G. Wells' The Time Machine before now. By all accounts, this is the original time travel story. Still, social class and how technical innovations change humanity are more central to the story than whether the narrator was actually able to travel to 802,701 AD. Ever since, time travel stories have been about exploring the possibilities of the present rather than some far-flung future (or past). This novella was sometimes clunky (but it was written in 1895)...
Bill Kerwin·8 years ago
Returning to a novel you liked years ago is often a risky business, particularly so when the genre of that novel is science fiction. Nothing can age so rapidly as the past’s conception of the future, and what once seemed cutting edge may, after fifty years or more, appear simply ludicrous.Because of this, I was delighted to find H.G. Wells' brief novel at least as charming and exciting as I remembered it, the Time Traveler’s scientific lecture still intriguing, the journey he describes still con...
Nayra.Hassan·9 years ago
عن غروب البشرية نتحدثعن البشر عندما صار طولهم 140سم وجوههم ناعمة..لافرق بين النساءوالرجالأصبح الجميع أقرب الأطفال شكلا و موضوعا كسالي غارقون في الراحةو لا يخافون سوى الظلام اندثرت البيوت و انتهى نظام الاسرةالجميع يعيشون في مباني ضخمةلا يوجد تعليماو تجارةاو منافسةاو حروباذن فهي الجنة ..لا بل هي أقرب لحظيرة الأبقار و أغنام..او عشة دواجن فهناك المورلووك.. الشاحبين يعيشون تحت الارض..يعملون بلا كلل ليعيش هؤلاء المدللين..و يقتنصون منهم ليلا..لياكلوهم كالاغنامو في إشارة واضحة بلا ترميز..يشير ويلز لتفوق...
Leonard Gaya·10 years ago
The Time Machine is not primarily a novel about time travel, time travel paradoxes and so forth. It is chiefly a speculation on the far future of humanity and, closer to home, about class conflict and the evolution of the industrial civilisation.It starts as an almost casual chat by the fireside about the possibility of travelling through the fourth dimension and the invention of the machine — oddly described as an ordinary bicycle that can go through time. The “Time Traveller” (he is never name...
Ahmad Ebaid·11 years ago
هربرت جورج ويلز قدم بحث عن وجود بعد رابع وهو بعد الزمان منفصل عن الأبعاد الزمانية التانية واترفض بحثه لأنهم اعتبروه مبهم وبعدها بأكتر من عشر سنين قدم أينشتين نفس الفكرة وأصبح أعظم شخصية في تاريخ العلم بعد نيوتن-طبعا بغض النظر عن الإثبات الرياضي المحكم اللي أزال الإبهام عكس البحث الأول, والتعنت اللي قابل أينشتاين في البداية-لحد هنا القصة دي تعتبر بتتكرر كتير واحد بيقدم حاجة وتترفض منه وبعدها بفترة واحد تاني يقدم نفس الحاجة تقريبا وبيعتبروها حاجة عظيمة بس المختلف في القصة دي إن ويلز مقعدش يلطم ويس...
Beth F·17 years ago
One of the most difficult courses I took in college was a class called Sociological Theory. The professor was either brilliant or a total nut, I’m still not sure, and one of the questions for our final exam was actually: Why? (Use diagrams to support your response).Ugh, ugh, ugh!!! I walked out of that class with a B and I kid you not, I have never worked so hard for a B in my life! I pity the one guy in my class who walked away with an A and don’t even want to think about what his social life w...