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Volume 51, Number 2, Spring 2002 |
THE MAGIC WORLD OF SCIENCE WRITER JULES VERNEby Richard Ellis Just about everyone knows Jules Verne, if not through his novels
then from the movies made from them: "Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Sea" (1954), When he wrote Twenty Thousand Leagues in 1870, the submarine
had just been introduced as a weapon of war, and underwater breathing
devices were in their infancy. Reading Verne's novels as they appeared
must have been as exhilarating an experience as watching men land
on the moon in 1969. But when hasty or sloppy translations turned
the work of a major French novelist into boys' adventure stories,
not unlike those of Edgar Rice Burroughs or H. Rider Haggard, the
English-speaking world was deprived of some of the best adventure
novels ever written. In addition to his better-known works, Verne
wrote a series of novels that were (in his lifetime) classified as
"voyages extraordinaires" and included Five Weeks
in a Balloon, Around the World in Eighty Days, From
the Earth to the Moon, and The Invasion of the Sea, which
sounds like another bathysphere novel but is instead about how the
sea can be made to invade the Sahara Desert. Written in 1905 and based
on fact (the French really did want to flood part of the eastern Sahara
and turn it into Like all of Verne's adventure stories, it is filled with scientific
detail that lends verisimilitude to the narrative (if you want to
know how to build a canal to flood Verne's novels were popular because they were often rousing adventure
stories with a heavy infusion of science or at least scientific terminology.
We might But Verne was writing fiction, and there is no rule that says you have to stick to the facts. Just because 60-foot-long narwhals or submarine-attacking, man-eating giant squids do not exist, doesn't mean that an author can't use them in a work of fiction. (Was there ever a ship-attacking white whale? Or a 25-foot-long white shark that vindictively attacked everybody in sight?) Weaving science into his adventure novels made them that much more popular, and Verne's readers probably wanted to believe everything he told them. The introduction to The Invasion of the Sea contains detailed notes about how the French planned to go about flooding the Sahara, rather as Ferdinand de Lesseps dug the Panama Canal, which is to say not very successfully.
In 2002, a new edition of The Mysterious Island was issued
by the Modern Library, translated by Jordan Stump and with an introduction
by Caleb Carr. This novel, originally published in 1875, is a sequel
to Verne was almost preternaturally productive. In addition to his novels, short stories, and essays, he wrote books of geography and history, including a historical geography of France and the three-volume Celebrated Travels and Travelers, which included The Exploration of the World, Great Navigators of the Eighteenth Century, and Great Explorers and Navigators of the Nineteenth Century. Anyone who questioned the science or history in his novels could always refer to his historical interpretations. These histories are minutely detailed and, as far as I can tell, fairly accurate. But the novels that I've read, with their hair's-breadth escapes, man-eating cephalopods, loyal servants, trusty dogs, and depraved, conniving natives (or pirates, convicts, Berbers, or whatever), still suggest Boy's Life adventure tales to me. I'm missing the intellectual subtleties of the new translations, but when I think of Twenty Thousand Leagues, I still think of the giant squid attacking James Mason aboard the Nautilus or Kirk Douglas playing the guitar to a sea lion. Verne's stories are, in short, fun. Although he predicted many things in his novels -- including balloon
travel, the helicopter, the electrical engine, and interplanetary
travel-it is, I think, safe to Imagine how this scientist manqué would have delighted
in the computer revolution, which has brought us among other delights
a Web site devoted to him (www.jv.gilead.org.il).
The site contains the full text of 17 of his 60 novels (in French,
English, and Spanish), frequently asked questions about Verne, a critical
analysis of his work, an Internet mailing list, the Jules Verne virtual
library, a chronology of Verne's life, the complete Verne bibliography,
the Verne virtual # "The Scientist Manqué,"March 10, 2002, Los Angeles Times.
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