The opening scenes of this novel are superb and evocative of any number of mystery stories. A stranger, his face heavily wrapped in bandages, arrives during a violent snow storm in a small out of the way town. Seeking shelter in a wayside inn his strange behaviour and secretive ways soon arouse suspicion, distrust and ultimately hostility. What makes this novel different from any other with a similar set-up is that the mysterious stranger isn't on the run from the law, or his partners in crime, but rather has put himself at odds with his fellow humans by his scientific, and brilliantly successful, experiments into invisibility. Something so keenly sought, and something which has long been a dream for many, turns out to be a curse beyond all imagining.
H.G. Wells was very good at portraying the dark flip-side of scientific research. For every brilliant scientific advance that helps mankind there is something destructive and unpleasant that crawls from the laboratory and causes misery and chaos. Having studied under T.H. Huxley Wells was uniquely placed among the popular authors of his day to address the debates surrounding the dark directions, and casually abandoned ethical codes, that dogged scientific advances during the twilight years of Queen Victoria's reign. Griffin - the Invisible Man - shows by his fanatical adherence to his scientific work how brilliant results can be achieved but, all too frequently, only at the expense of terrible suffering.
Having successfully discovered the secret to invisibility Griffin finds himself hounded and attacked by everyone who senses his presence. Obtaining food, finding shelter, even walking down a crowded street become nightmarishly difficult tasks. The difficulties of surviving, combined with the strain caused by years of research at the expense of all else, turns Griffin's mind into a very dark place indeed. From initially being something to welcome invisibility ultimately becomes a means by which vengence can be taken against the human race.
Wells was always a terrifically good descriptive writer and the accounts of the mayhem the invisible man causes in the small community in which he finds himself have a terrific power; he was also good at portraying the twisted imaginings of Griffin as the people begin to turn on him. What perhaps slighty counts against the book is the fact that Griffin ultimately does become a typical 'mad scientist'. As his behaviour becomes ever more extreme the novel drifts close to cliche but, all the same, as a warning against the obsessive pursuit of a dream, The Invisible Man is one of the best books out there.