First edition, first issue of Wells's novel, a foundational work of modern science fiction, in which the author redeploys the conventions of the invasion-scare genre to imagine a force of seemingly invincible Martians.
The story was suggested by the author's brother, Frank: the two men were walking "through some particularly peaceful Surrey scenery" when Frank remarked, "suppose some beings from another planet were to drop out of the sky suddenly". The novel is dedicated to Frank with the comment "this rendering of his idea".
This is a first issue copy, with the 16-page publisher's catalogue, "Mr. William Heinemann's Autumn Announcements", dated 1897 and headed by New Letters of Napoleon I on the second page. The novel was originally serialized simultaneously in Pearson's magazine in Great Britain and Cosmopolitan magazine in the US, from April to December 1897.
Octavo. Original grey cloth, spine and front cover lettered in black, rear cover with publisher's monogram black, edges untrimmed.
With 16 pp. of publisher's advertisements at rear.
Bookseller's blindstamp to front free endpaper. Spine slightly darkened, cloth a little marked, inner hinges partly cracked but firm, light foxing to endpapers and occasionally to contents, else clean internally: a very good copy.
Hammond B5; Wells 14; Currey pp. 526-7.