Analysis Of The Invisible Man By H. G. Wells

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If one were to wake up in the morning to find themselves invisible, what would they do for the day? Would they act as if it were just a usual day or would they rebel for the day solely to the fact that nobody would know it was them? In the book, The Invisible Man, something like this happens to the main character of the story. Did the man use this time to do things that would hurt or help society? Whether it was for the good or for the bad, H.G. Wells, the author of the book, uses the character’s actions to better society. Because of H.G. Wells’s use of theme, literary devices, and plot in the book, the readers are able to uncover the different messages Wells hid throughout his writings. Through Wells’s use of plot in the story, it is described to the reader that the main character of the story is a human. With this, the reader can conclude that everybody makes mistakes and that society needs to learn from those mistakes. Throughout the book, it is discovered by the readers that Wells is the one narrating the story. This can be seen when the book says, “I have told the circumstance of the stranger’s arrival in Iping with a certain fulness of detail, in order that the curious impression he created may be understood by the reader” (Wells, 13). One can believe that he is the storyteller because of the way he talks about how he wrote the story in a way that all readers could understand.Wells uses his narrative to express this meaning through what is happening in the plot. This

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