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review 2018-08-22 11:29
Journey to the Centre of the Earth by Jules Verne
Journey to the Centre of the Earth (Oxford World's Classics) - William Butcher,Jules Verne

TITLE:  Journey to the Centre of the Earth

 

AUTHOR:  Jules Verne

 

TRANSLATOR:  William Butcher

 

EDITION:  Oxford World's Classics

 

DATE OF PUBLICATION:  2008 (reissue)

 

FORMAT:  Paperback

 

ISBN-13:  9780199538072

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Description:

 

"Now available in a new translation, this classic of nineteenth century French literature has been consistently praised for its style and its vision of the world. Professor Lidenbrock and his nephew Axel travel across Iceland, and then down through an extinct crater toward a sunless sea where they enter a living past and are confronted with the origins of man. Exploring the prehistory of the globe, this novel can also be read as a psychological quest, for the journey itself is as important as arrival or discovery. Verne's distinctive combination of realism and Romanticism has marked figures as diverse as Sartre and Tournier, Mark Twain and Conan Doyle."

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Journey to the Centre of the Earth is an exciting adventure story that is well plotted and fast paced with interesting characters.  This book revolves around the (sometimes nail-biting) subterreanean adventures of the excitable Professor Lidenbrock (who reminds me of the overly-energetic Alexander von Humboldt), his nephew Axel, and eventually the frightfully competent Icelander Hans.  The wonderously fantastical prehistoric and geological settings are beautifully described.  The story is fantastic, but neither full-out fantasy or science-fiction.  Everything described by Jules Verne in the book in terms of geology and natural history reflects the state of scientific knowledge at the time of writing (1864) - except (of course) the fantastical bits. 

 

From a variety of comments on the internet, apparently the previous English translations of this book have been butchered with insertions, omissions, name changes and clunky writing.  This new translation by William Butcher aims to be faithful to the original French novel.  I found this translation to be well done, with the narrative flowing smoothly.  It didn't read like a translation at all.  The book includes notes where relevant.  This edition also has in interesting introduction which discusses certain aspects of the book, as well as important aspects of Jules Verne's life.

 

 

 

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photo 2015-04-22 11:23
World Earth Day

Only when the last tree has died and the last river been poisoned and the last fish been caught will we realize we cannot eat money.

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review 2014-07-29 12:22
good read
The Flooded Earth: Our Future In a World Without Ice Caps - Peter D. Ward

Both apocalyptic and informative.  There were times I found myself getting somewhat depressed while reading this book but that is because there is an underlying truth in it and that is if we don't change our consumption habits in a large and meaningful way fairly quickly the earth will see huge upheavals in the coming century.

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review 2011-12-10 00:00
When Ghosts Speak: Understanding the World of Earthbound Spirits
When Ghosts Speak: Understanding the World of Earthbound Spirits - Mary Ann Winkowski Sorry but this seems like fiction. After seeing her other books, she is known for writing fiction books about hauntings.
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review 2011-06-17 00:00
World Without End (The Pillars of the Earth, #2)
World Without End (The Pillars of the Ea... World Without End (The Pillars of the Earth, #2) - Ken Follett Well, I read the whole damn thing. A 21st Century soap opera set in the 14th Century. Sloppily written and poorly edited it was, nevertheless, entertaining - especially if you let prurient instincts take over. This book had a bit of everything - strong women, weak men, strong men, palace intrigue, religious corruption, war, violence, sex - tons of sex, consensual and non-consensual, heterosexual and homosexual. All in all a pretty bad book. It's 1000 + pages so don't read it expecting anything other than a big, lusty, summer read.
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