(Read in the Project Gutenberg edition, which has just a few typos.)
Wells, of course, I knew from reading War of the Worlds as a teenager, and having "The Plattner Story" tediously thrust upon me in collections of great fantasy stories, or some other nonsense.
The stories here range from ones exploring the depths of the human psyche to ones describing the depths of the ocean and the depths of horror. Unexpectedly, Wells had an excellent touch when it comes to the complexities of the human mind. "A Slip Under the Microscope" explores the way guilt can operate on us; "A Reconciliation" and "The Cone" are both about what hate can bring people to do.
Wells wrote some wonderful ordinary characters living careful, circumscribed lives for one reason or another--they're sympathetic and realistic, and Wells focuses on how huge the ordinary stresses of life can loom. "A Catastrophe" starts with impending economic catastrophe in the lives of a struggling couple and ends with-- I won't spoil it. "The Jilting of Jane" is an amusing look at how the little community of wife, husband, and servant can be upset by a change in one of them. There's a lot of gentle, humorous poking at characters just like the reader; for example, "The Lost Inheritance." "The Apple" hands an object from legend to a young man embarrassed to be seen carrying it.
While I could have done without some of the looooong descriptions of way-cool stuff (the hallucination in "Under the Knife" comes to mind), I enjoyed the way Wells splices odd happenings into the lives of his very ordinary characters. "The Strange Orchid" has a ... okay, strange orchid entering the life of a shy little man living a dull little life; "The Story of the Late Mr. Elvesham" includes a little magic. Guilt and obsession show up in several stories: "Pollock and the Porroh Man," "A Moth."
But, this being H. G. Wells, there's some horror here, too, and some weird happenings. "The Story of Davidson's Eyes" is freaky and difficult to describe. (Poor Davidson!) Wells seems to have liked weird creatures: "In the Avu Observatory" has an astronomer attacked in the dark by a creature we never see; "The Sea Raiders" has critters from the abyss with a liking for human flesh. Both are wonderfully creepy stories. "Aepyornis Island" features a creature from the distant past, in a story with very little plot. "In the Abyss" is a weird-set-piece story, with a long description of the incomprehensible culture of sentient creatures living at the bottom of the ocean. (Of course, "Under the Knife" has a different kind of horror for the modern reader: when Wells wrote the story, if you needed an operation, the doctor showed up at your house and did it right there, without benefit of modern sterilization methods ... shudder)
There's some ambivalence about the modern age apparent in some of the stories. "The Argonauts of the Air" has one of the strangest methods of getting a flying machine into the air that I've ever seen (and some unfortunate results); and poor Davidson has his eye problem because of some experiments. "The Lord of the Dynamos" seems to be about how machinery can work on the human mind. "The Cone" has some unpleasant things to say about factories.
Unfortunately, there's a certain amount of racism, too. A noxious racist slur gets used quite casually in more than one story (usually by a reprehensible character), and some of the stories have an entertaining plot, but racist overtones. "A Deal in Ostriches" and "The Rajah's Treasure" are actually quite funny; but there's a lot of racism in presentation of the characters. "The Lord of the Dynamos" is probably the worst with regard to this, and can be missed.
All in all, though, I enjoyed the stories more than I thought I might. The book feels like a little snapshot of the worries and wonderings of British people at the turn of the 20th century and is a pretty good read.