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Conference noted::sf

Title:Arcana Caelestia
Notice:Directory listings are in topic 2
Moderator:NETRIX::thomas
Created:Thu Dec 08 1983
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1300
Total number of notes:18728

715.0. "Jules Verne" by HPSRAD::SAWIN (Jim Sawin, DTN 297-4933) Wed Nov 09 1988 16:32

This note shall be for discussion of Jules Verne and his works.  His novels
are probably not what most people think of as "traditional" science fiction,
but he was one of the early pioneers in this genre.

I'm really just starting out with Verne; I've read _Around the World in 80
Days_, which is not as much of a SF novel, and I've just started _Journey to
the Center of the Earth_, which looks very promising.  I'm enjoying the humor
and mystery which he has added to the story, and I'm finding this one hard to
put down.

Does anyone have a favorite Verne novel?  What would you recommend me to read
next?

Jim
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715.1funFLASH1::KALLISAnger's no replacement for reason.Wed Nov 09 1988 19:4118
    Re .0 (Jim):
    
    I dunno about a "favorite," but certainly one I remember with some
    fondness id _Hector Servadac_, subtitled "Off on a Comet."  The
    basic idea is that a comet clips the Earth so that a small chunk
    of Africa (including the Rock of Gibralter) is carried into space.
    This includes a number of people; these folk (who survive because
    the comet has sufficient mass and atmosdphere) are given a tour
    of the Solar System.
    
    Technologically, the transfer mechanism was nonsense when Verne
    wrote it.  But so was his Moon Gun in _From the Earth to the Moon_.
    The book's fun.  Ansd if you had an aide nasmed Ben Zoof ....
    
    There's a lot of turn-of-the-Century-era Sense of Wonder in this
    romp.
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr.
715.220,000 Leagues Under the SeaBMT::BOWERSCount Zero InterruptWed Nov 09 1988 19:431
    
715.3Village in the TreetopsLEDS::BUSCHDave Busch at NKS1-2Wed Nov 09 1988 20:305
I read "Village in the Treetops" (a poor translation of "The Flying Village", or
smomething like that) quite a while back. Concerned an adventure in Africa. I 
don't remember the details but it wasn't bad as I recall.

Dave
715.4Hooray for Captain NemoCXCAD::WILLIAMSThu Nov 10 1988 12:183
    "The Mysterious Island"
    
    sequel to "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea"
715.5All of them !SHIRE::SPECHTERGeneva, the land of eternal rain...Tue Nov 15 1988 07:597
    We had to read Jules Verne in school and I remember being fascinated
    by them. I would recomend all of them for very enjoyable reading.
    They are all very well written, some SF and others "just" fiction
    - but wow what an imagination !
    The end of the Moon Gun (can't remember the correct title) is very
    clever..
    Enjoy
715.6Tsiolkovsky on VerneWRKSYS::KLAESAll the Universe, or nothing!Thu Jul 26 1990 21:0810
        "It seems to me, that the first seeds of the idea were sown
    by that great science-fiction author Jules Verne.  He startled my 
    brain.  He directed my thoughts along certain lines; then came a 
    desire, and after that, the work of the mind." 

           - Konstantin E. Tsiolkovsky, the Soviet father of modern
             space flight.  His American counterpart, Robert H. 
             Goddard, was similarly affected by the works of H. G.
             Wells.