The War of the Worlds was nominated as a Language and literature good article, but it did not meet the good article criteria at the time (November 29, 2022). There are suggestions on the review page for improving the article. If you can improve it, please do; it may then be renominated. |
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Reviewing |
Reviewer: TompaDompa (talk · contribs) 23:59, 26 November 2022 (UTC)
I will review this. TompaDompa (talk) 23:59, 26 November 2022 (UTC)
Wells'sand
Wells'.
At the time of the book's publication, it was classified as a scientific romance– this is unsourced in the WP:LEAD and not mentioned in the body as all.
It was memorably dramatised– "memorably" is a MOS:Word to watch.
directed by and starring– "starring" is an odd choice of word here. I would perhaps say "directed and narrated by" or even just "by".
listeners who did not know the book's events were fictional– "the book's" events? The listeners presumably didn't know that it was an adaptation of a book in the first place.
notably Robert H. Goddard– "notably" is a MOS:Word to watch.
disgorging Martians– I would suggest using a different word since "disgorge" is an uncommon word to the point of being somewhat conspicuous.
A human deputation– I would suggest using a different word, perhaps "delegation". The text should be accessible to most readers, and this is an unnecessarily uncommon word to use here.
"a blinding glare of green light" and a loud concussion attend the arrival of the fifth Martian cylinder– "attend"? I might use a different word such as "accompany" or "signal", but this is an example of detail that seems like it could be left out altogether (as well as an example of overusing direct quotes from the novel). It could probably all be replaced by "the fifth Martian cylinder arrives".
The reader is then led to believe– that sounds a lot like unsourced WP:ANALYSIS to me.
Enrouteshould be two words ("En route"), but if it is deemed necessary to put it in italics per MOS:FOREIGNITALIC it should probably be replaced with plain English. I am however inclined to think that this is an instance that falls under MOS:FOREIGN's "Common usage in English" clause and thus should not have italics.
finally attempting to end it all– seems like a MOS:EUPHEMISM to me.
somewhat miraculously– seems like editorializing to me.
It is considered one of the first works to theorise the existence of a race intelligent enough to invade Earth.– not in the cited source. I am also a bit confused as to why this is under the "style" heading.
as though watching tiny organisms through a microscope– this is a comparison made by Wells, which should be made clearer. Removing the preceding comma would help.
The scientific fascinations [...] Martian invasion force.– not in the cited source.
In 1894 a French astronomer observed a 'strange light' on Mars, and published his findings in the scientific journal Nature on the second of August that year. Wells used this observation to open the novel, imagining these lights to be the launching of the Martian cylinders toward Earth.– unsourced. Batchelor p. 23 could be used for this (ironically, since the stuff that is currently cited to Batchelor p. 23–24 fails verification), but it would have to be rephrased to not run afoul of WP:Close paraphrasing.
The Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli observed geological features on Mars in 1878 which he called canali– no, he didn't. He may have thought he did during the 1877 opposition (not in 1878)—though I'm not sure if he characterized the canali as geological features, specifically—but he was mistaken. What he did was describe linear features that later turned out to be illusory. Changing "observed geological" to "described linear" would fix that problem. It should also be clarified that the Martian canals were later determined to be optical illusions. Furthermore, this fails verification.
This concept was explored by American astronomer Percival Lowell in the book Mars in 1895, speculating that these might be irrigation channels constructed by a sentient life form to support existence on an arid, dying world, similar to that which Wells suggests the Martians have left behind.– fails verification.
The novel also presents ideas related to Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection, both in specific ideas discussed by the Narrator, and themes explored by the story.– unsourced.
Mars, being an older world than the Earth– this lacks the important context that the planets were at the time believed to have formed sequentially such that planets closer to the Sun were formed later than planets further out.
Wells has also theorised [...] creatures from another planet.– unsourced. Parts are also off-topic.
how it was bringing total destruction to parts of the South London landscape that were familiar to them– specifying South London doesn't reflect the cited source. I would replace "parts of the South London landscape" with "locations" or something along those lines.
Wells wrote in a letter to Elizabeth Healey– who is Elizabeth Healey?
In the late 19th century, the British Empire was the predominant colonial power on the globe, making its domestic heart a poignant and terrifying starting point for an invasion by Martians with their own imperialist agenda.– this goes far beyond what the cited source actually says.
which anticipated an apocalypse occurring at midnight on the last day of 1899– the cited source says 1900.
This is a practice familiar from the first publication of Charles Dickens' novels earlier in the nineteenth century.– unnecessary. Remove.
In the late 1890s it was common for novels [...]– this is a good example of providing context. That being said, I think it would be better to rephrase it to bring the focus back to The War of the Worlds more quickly, e.g. by starting with "As was common [...]".
April – December 1897– the en dash should be unspaced, per MOS:ENTO.
The first was published in the New York Evening Journal between December 1897 and January 1898. The story was published as Fighters from Mars or the War of the Worlds. It changed the location of the story to a New York setting.– needs copyediting. I think this could work as one sentence or as two sentences, but the current version with three sentences reads very poorly. I would also suggest leading with the title rather than the publisher (which also goes for the other version).
Both pirated versions– pirated?
were followed by Edison's Conquest of Mars by Garrett P. Serviss– surely this does not belong in this section?
Even though these versions– this comes right after the mention of Edison's Conquest of Mars but refers to the two Fighters from Mars.
Even though these versions are deemed as unauthorised serialisations of the novel, it is possible that H. G. Wells may have, without realising it, agreed to the serialisation in the New York Evening Journal.– vague to the point of MOS:WEASEL. "Deemed as unauthorised serialisations" by whom? Why is it necessary to qualify it as saying that "it is possible that H. G. Wells may have", and why should it be mentioned if those qualifiers are necessary? What is it that Wells did that may have constituted such an agreement? This sentence barely informs the reader of anything at all. This also clearly belongs in the preceding paragraph, not a separate one.
Holt, Rinehart & Winston repressed the book in 2000– in this context, I would parse "repress" as "suppress", which is of course the opposite of what they did. The word to use is "republish", but why mention this at all?
wrote that Wells' work had "a very distinct success" when serialised– is that to say that they wrote that at the time it was serialised, or that they wrote it later as an assessment of the serialisation in hindsight?
There are a number of plot similarities between Wells's book and The Battle of Dorking. In both books a ruthless enemy makes a devastating surprise attack, with the British armed forces helpless to stop its relentless advance, and both involve the destruction of the Home Counties of southern England.– this goes beyond what the cited source says a fair bit.
However The War of the Worlds transcends the typical fascination of invasion literature with [...]– what the cited source says is "I. F. Clarke writes: 'At this point The War of the Worlds parts company with the mass of imaginary war fiction as it had developed since the time of The Battle of Dorking; for Wells's story transcends all the limitations of [...]", which is quite different.
Although much of invasion literature may have been less sophisticated and visionary– this is an opinion, but it's presented in WP:WikiVoice.
Charles Darwin's scientific theory of natural selection– linking to scientific theory here comes across as making a WP:POINT.
These scientific ideas combined to present the possibility– that's not really accurate, and it's not what the cited source says, either. You can say that the ideas were combined, but not that the ideas themselves combined.
By the time Wells wrote The War of the Worlds, there had been three centuries of observation of Mars through telescopes. Galileo observed the planet's phases in 1610 and in 1666 Giovanni Cassini identified the polar ice caps.– excessive detail to the point of going WP:OFFTOPIC.
Critic Howard Black wrote that [...]– I would add when (what year) Black wrote that.
The novel also suggests a potential future for human evolution and perhaps a warning against overvaluing intelligence against more human qualities. The Narrator describes the Martians as having evolved an overdeveloped brain, which has left them with cumbersome bodies, with increased intelligence, but a diminished ability to use their emotions, something Wells attributes to bodily function.– unsourced.
The Narrator refers to an 1893 publication suggesting that the evolution of the human brain might outstrip the development of the body, and organs such as the stomach, nose, teeth, and hair would wither, leaving humans as thinking machines, needing mechanical devices much like the Tripod fighting machines, to be able to interact with their environment.– this is a very long sentence that needs copyediting for readability.
At the time of the novel's publication the British Empire had conquered and colonised dozens of territories in Africa, Oceania, North and South America, the Middle East, South and Southeast Asia, and the Atlantic and Pacific islands.– unsourced.
Wells suggests this idea in the following passage:– according to whom? This is analysis.
Good and evil appear relative,
his attempts to relate the invasion to Armageddon seem examples of his mental derangement, and
His death [...] appears an indictment of his obsolete religious attitudes. These are all unattributed opinions.
but the Narrator twice prays to God, and suggests that bacteria may have been divinely allowed to exist on Earth for a reason such as this, suggesting a more nuanced critique.– unsourced.
The novel originated several enduring Martian tropes in science fiction writing. These include Mars being an ancient world, nearing the end of its life, being the home of a superior civilisation capable of advanced feats of science and engineering, and also being a source of invasion forces, keen to conquer the Earth.– that's simply wrong. Utopian fiction was the main genre of Martian fiction at the time, for one thing. This also fails verification.
Influential scientist Freeman Dyson– "influential" is a MOS:Word to watch.
also acknowledged his debt– "also"?
to reading H. G. Wells's fictions– so not this book specifically, then?
established the vernacular term of 'martian' as a description for something offworldly or unknown– not what the source says. It says
"the Martians" became a shorthand term for all sorts of inimical alien being.
The first science fiction to be set on Mars may be Across the Zodiac: The Story of a Wrecked Record (1880) by Percy Greg.– it's not. Earlier works where the classification as science fiction may be debatable notwithstanding, the 1873 novel A Narrative of the Travels and Adventures of Paul Aermont among the Planets is set on Mars for part of the story. It may however be the first to be set primarily on Mars.
It was a long-winded book concerned with a civil war on Mars.– why mention that it was long-winded? This is a conspicuous paraphrasing of the source's "The book is an exhaustingly long and, to be honest, boring account of a civil war on the Red Planet." that I think ends up on the wrong side of WP:Close paraphrasing, especially considering that "long-winded" is an unattributed opinion.
Wells had already proposed another outcome for the alien invasion story in The War of the Worlds.– what does this have to do with anything?
The War of the Worlds was reprinted in the United States in 1927– that seems like publication history to me.
John W. Campbell [...] The Kraken Wakes.– this is not self-evidently relevant or WP:DUE.
The theme of alien invasion has remained popular to the present day and is frequently used in the plots of all forms of popular entertainment including movies, television, novels, comics and video games.– unsourced.
Alan Moore's graphic novel, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume II, retells the events in The War of the Worlds.– unsourced.
The Tripods trilogy of books features a central theme of invasion by alien-controlled tripods.– unsourced.
best selling– I would say either hyphenate or remove the space for grammar, but this should be removed.
The cast included Jason Robards in Welles' role of 'Professor Pierson', Steve Allen, Douglas Edwards, Hector Elizondo and Rene Auberjonois. A Halloween-based special episode of Hey Arnold! was aired to parody The War of the Worlds; the costumes that the main characters wore referenced a species from Star Trek. An animated series of Justice League from 2001 begins with a three-part saga called "Secret Origins" and features tripod machines invading and attacking the city.– unsourced.
which received generally positive reviews– so what?
The Great Martian War 1913–1917 is a 2013 made-for-television science fiction film docudrama that adapts The War of the Worlds and unfolds in the style of a documentary broadcast on The History Channel. The film portrays an alternative history of World War I in which Europe and its allies, including America, fight the Martian invaders instead of Germany and its allies. The docudrama includes both new and digitally altered film footage shot during the War to End All Wars to establish the scope of the interplanetary conflict. The film's original 2013 UK broadcast was during the first year of the First World War centennial; the first US cable TV broadcast came in 2014, almost 10 months later.– unsourced.
GA review – see WP:WIAGA for criteria
@Lankyant: I'm putting this on hold. The list of issues above is not exhaustive, but a sample of issues I noted while reading through the article. I don't think this can be brought up to WP:Good article standards within a reasonable time frame, but I would love to be proved wrong on that count. If you are willing and able to commit large amounts of time and effort to improving this article in the near future, please indicate so and address this first batch of issues I have brought up. Otherwise, I will close this nomination as unsuccessful in about a week or so (in which case the article can of course be re-nominated at any time). TompaDompa (talk) 04:17, 28 November 2022 (UTC)