Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea

Hardcover, 592 pages

Published June 30, 2013 by 1st World Library.

ISBN:
978-1-4218-5162-4
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A nineteenth-century science fiction tale of an electric submarine, its eccentric captain, and undersea world, which anticipated many of the scientific achievements of the twentieth century.

90 editions

Encyclopedia Nautica

A classic adventure tale cataloging every fish, seaweed, and coral in the various oceans. Some of them are real.

As adventure tales go, particularly from this classic era, it's pretty good. I read it as a young teen and remember it fondly, although perhaps my fondness comes from the Classics Illustrated comic as much as from the actual text.

In honesty, it doesn't bear up as well as I'd hoped. Nemo's unexplored misandry against the M. Arronax's relentless intellectualism left me with too little satisfaction to give the story more than four stars.

Recommended, if only for the picture of what early science fiction looked like post-Frankenstein and pre-War of the Worlds.

Whatever happened to Captain Nemo

I re-read (or just read) this classic recently, because a song from the 1970 audio story with Jean Gabin was in loop in my head for whatever reason. I thought I'd finally remember who was really the Captain Nemo and what happened to him. Alas, Jules Verne was more interested in fish naming than in backstory. Oh well, still an excellent classic full of cool fishes and visionary science.

Review of 'Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea' on 'Goodreads'

Jules Verne's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea is an incredible read that tells the tale of many fascinating characters but is told from the perspective of Pierre Aronnax, a professor of Marine Biology who along with his loyal assistant, Conseil is tasked with finding a monster who is causing havoc beneath the waves. A monster that seems able to travel faster than any marine inhabitant that Aronnax has encountered and his curiosity is spiked and his ego fit to burst to be known as the man who found the anomaly. But of course, things do not go to plan and everything Aronnax, Conseil and the hunter, Ned Land have known when they sink beneath the waves turns out to be wrong and they see the world anew.

The Nautilus becomes their new prison and Verne's creation sounds incredible and truly shows just how ahead of his time he was with …

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