• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.Professor Aronnax, his trusty servant Conseil, and the Canadian harpooner Ned Land embark on a perilous journey to rid the waters of a fearsome creature that lurks beneath the waves.The "monster" turns out to be a massive submarine captained by the mysterious Captain Nemo, who holds them imprisoned for a long time. So starts not only one of Jules Verne's great adventure classics, but also a genuinely amazing journey from Atlantis' sunken metropolis to the South Pole.
• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.Here's an example of a "forgotten" work. The story of two women who reside in a Norway Inn is told in Ticket No. "9672." Dame Hansen is a foolish creature, and her daughter Hulda must deal with her mistakes. Their brother Joel, as well as the extraordinary Sylvius Hogg, who assists them all when the young Hansens save him from the edge of the Rjukanfos Waterfall, comes to their aid.
• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.They laughed at his plans for heavier-than-air aircraft. But it was the Albatross, the most magnificent flying machine ever built, that gave him the final laugh. Robur, Lord of the Skies, was on his way to become the world's conqueror! Robur the Conqueror is a fantastic companion to 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, because it addresses many of the same topics.
In this classic adventure story, a wealthy gentleman, Phileas Fogg, makes a bet that he can travel around the world in eighty days. Fogg and his servant set off immediately, determined to win this race against time. Little do they know they aren't making the journey alone.... Fogg has been fingered as the culprit in a bank robbery, and a detective in hot pursuit is trailing them as they cross every continent.
• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.Jules Verne's patriotic novel "Facing the Flag" or "For the Flag" was published in 1896. The book is part of a series called "Voyages Extraordinaires (Extraordinary Journeys)." The idea of France and the entire globe being attacked by a super-weapon (what would now be called a weapon of mass destruction) is repeated in "The Begum's Millions," which Verne published in 1879, and the menace is finally averted through the force of French patriotism. It is one of the earliest works to deal with issues that would become crucial in World War II and the Cold War half a century after its release.
• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.Michael Strogoff, or the Courier of the Czar, was first published in French in 1867 and is considered one of Jules Verne's best works. This captivating novel takes place in Russia and follows Michael Strogoff, the Czar's courier, as he embarks on an impossible journey to save his homeland. The dangerous Feofar Khan is inspired by a traitor to invade Siberia and form a rebellion, which leads to a plot to assassinate the czar's brother, the Grand Duke. As a result, Strogoff is dispatched to warn the Duke, acting as the nation's last hope for putting an end to the insurgency. He meets new people, makes new friends, and is captured by the enemy along the way, just to make a spectacular escape.
• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.From the Earth to the Moon is one of the oldest scientific fantasy stories ever published, following three affluent members of a post-Civil War gun club who design and build a huge columbiad — and then ride a spaceship fired from it all the way to the moon!
• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.Dick Sands, the epic of the slave trade, was published in 1878. This depiction of Africa's wilds, its adventures and dangers, as well as the brutal hunting of beasts and mankind, has long been a favourite of Verne's readers. It is devoid of wonders and inventions, instead attempting to transmit two real impressions through exciting situations and deeds. One is the traveler's teaching of geographical information, such as the picture of Africa as it has been discovered by explorers, botanists, and zoologists. The other is the moral lesson of slavery's terrible curse, its brutalising, horrifying influence on those who come into contact with it, and the utterly destructive impact it has had on Africa itself.
A daring geology professor stumbles across a document in which a 16th-century explorer claims to have discovered a way to the earth's core. Professor Lidenbrock can't pass up the chance to investigate, so he and his nephew Axel head out across Iceland with Hans Bjelke, a local guide. The expedition descends into an extinct volcano in search of a sunless sea, where they discover a subterranean world of brilliant rocks, antediluvian forests, and strange aquatic life - a living past that bears the keys to humanity's origins.
• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.The story begins with a comet passing by the Earth and collecting a few little pieces of it. A total of forty people from various countries and ages have been sentenced to a two-year voyage aboard the comet. They develop a mini-society to deal with the comet's terrible environment (mostly the cold). The 'comet' has a diameter of around 2300 kilometres, significantly greater than any comet or asteroid known to exist."
• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added."The Survivors of the Chancellor: Diary of J. R. Kazallon, Passenger" is a Jules Verne novel published in 1875 about the last voyage of a British sailing ship, the Chancellor, as narrated through the eyes of one of its passengers (in the form of a diary).
The story follows the adventures of five American Prisoners on an unknown island in the South Pacific. As famine and murder plague the city of Richmond, Virginia during the American Civil War, five northern POWs decide to flee in an unorthodox way — by hijacking a balloon! This is just the start of their journey...
• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.It is the first novel in which Verne developed the "ingredients" of his later writing, deftly combining a plot full of adventure and twists to keep the reader's attention with technical, topographical, and historical detail. The book provides readers with a glimpse into the exploration of Africa, which was still relatively unknown to Europeans at the time, with explorers going throughout the continent in pursuit of its mysteries.
An Antarctic Mystery: • With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.In the year 1839, Mr. Jeorling sets out on the "Halbrane," whose captain Len Guy is obsessed with Edgar Allan Poe's novel "The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym," after his geological and mineralogical studies has brought him to the Kerguelen sub-Antarctic archipelago in the Indian Ocean. —- In that story, Poe tells of Len Guy's brother William Guy, the captain of the "Jane," who was convinced by Arthur Gordon Pym to lead an Antarctic expedition. Despite the fact that the "Jane" perished during this voyage, Pym was able to send along his diary to Edgar Allen Poe. —- Mr. Jeorling becomes increasingly convinced of the story's veracity, encouraging Captain Len Guy to pursue his brother into the Antarctic, where they feel he may still be alive.
Depuis déjà trois bonnes heures, ces deux entêtés savants disputaient, sans se rien céder, sur la question de l’Orénoque. Ce célèbre fleuve de l’Amérique méridionale, principale artère du Venezuela, se dirigeait-il, dans la première partie de son cours, de l’est à l’ouest, ainsi que l’établissaient les plus récentes cartes, ou ne venait-il pas du sud-ouest ? En ce cas, le Guaviare ou l’Atabapo n’étaient-ils pas considérés à tort comme des affluents ?
• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.The Underground City is a story by Jules Verne concerning the fortunes of Aberfoyle, a mining village near Stirling, Scotland. After receiving a letter from an old acquaintance, miner James Starr sets off for the Aberfoyle mine. Despite the fact that the mine was thought to have been mined out a decade ago, James Starr discovers a mine overman, Simon Ford, and his family living deep within the mine. The protagonists must contend with unusual and incomprehensible phenomena in and around the mine after Simon Ford discovers a big vein of coal.
• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.Jules Verne's adventure novel "Godfrey Morgan: A Californian Mystery," sometimes known as "School for Crusoes," was released in 1882. It depicts the story of Godfrey Morgan, a young adventurer, and Professor T. Artelett, his deportment instructor, who embark on a round-the-world ocean expedition. Their ship is lost at sea, and they are stranded on a secluded island, where they rescue and befriend Carefinotu, an African slave.
• All content is redone in a new style, with the author's name and the title of the novel at the top.• For a better glance, a small graphic is added at the beginning of each chapter.• With a picture of Jules Verne, a detailed biography of him is added.Jules Verne's novel Eight Hundred Leagues on the sss (French: La Jangada - Huit Cents lieues sur l'Amazone) was published in 1881. This narrative, unlike many of his others, does not contain any science fiction themes. It's a story about adventure. Joam Garral, a ranch owner living on the Peruvian-Brazilian border on the sss River, is compelled to move downstream as his history catches up with him in this novel. The majority of the tale takes place on a big jangada (a Brazilian timber raft) that Garral and his family use to float to the river's mouth at Belém. The raft, scenery, and travel are all detailed in great detail.
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