20,000 Leagues Under the Sea

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Jules Verne: 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1981, Random House Childrens Books)

Paperback, 95 pages

Langue : English

Publié 30 mars 1981 par Random House Childrens Books.

ISBN :
978-0-394-84722-1
ISBN copié !
Numéro OCLC :
10732517

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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.

226 éditions

a publié une critique de Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas par Jules Verne

A gripping episodic adventure through a strange, hidden world of marvels.

...even though marine science and geology have passed it by.

Captain Nemo is compelling and mysterious as ever, if the passengers are rather broadly drawn (at least all three of them are distinct) and the crew is more or less faceless. (Aside from Nemo, the crew doesn’t speak to the passengers, so they’re never able to pick up the Nautilus’ private language.)

And Verne has really thought things through. Like, how did Nemo get something of this scale built without someone noticing? He farmed out different parts and systems to different factories scattered across the world. Ocean-based textiles, undersea mines, an isolated source of fuel that no surface-based ship will find.

Even the parts where he made up oceanography out of whole cloth, like the deeper outflow throgh Gibraltar (which as it turns out does exist, but not for the reasons Nemo suggests, which have since been …

Sujets

  • Baby books
  • Fiction
  • Science fiction
  • Sea stories
  • Submarines
  • Submarines (Ships)
  • Children: Babies & Toddlers