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Loading... A Floating City (1870)by Jules Verne
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This was a quick romp with a cruise ship that serves as a virtual city of its own. There is excitement, adventure, the clashing of heads, and a quick plot-line that glides along towards its conclusion. I quite liked it and feel that this is a good book for those interested in Verne and classics to read. 4 stars! Prosiguiendo mi itinerario por la obra de Julio Verne he leído "Una ciudad flotante". Es tan agradable el recorrido en el relato de Verne que uno queda encantado leyendo casi sin parar. A diferencia de otras de sus obras, en ésta no encontramos descripciones muy detallladas ni una gran enumeración de detalles geográficos y/o técnico-científicos, aunque existen se nota la reducción. El uso clásico de términos de navegación marítima siempre requiere de diccionario o imaginación amplia. Para mí ha sido muy grata lectura, quizá sólo importunada por algunos errores en la edición que conseguimos (signos de puntuación omitidos, algunas letras incorrectas o faltantes, ojo con eso editorial Dreams). Me ha parecido un período bastante corto el relatado así como la distancia recorrida no se advierte como mucha. Esto hizo percibir como una historia bastante reducida. En esta obra no tenemos grandes accidentes o desgracias. Es de rápida lectura esta novela. Es de notar las alusiones que hace Verne sobre los anglosajones contrapuestos a lo francés. Lo más notorio es la frivolidad y superficialidad que les atribuye. Claro está que yo aplicaría eso mismo a todo lo que ahora es Occidente o el "Norte" donde los franceses también estarían incluidos. Pero es bueno saber que ya existía esa conciencia social en nuestro autor y en algunos de ese tiempo, lástima que con escasa trascendencia. Es curiosa la referencia al mormonismo que se encuentra en sus inicios en esa época. Pero notoria la religiosidad anglosajona. La amistad fraterna siempre es buen elemento en estas obras. Como me gusta la aventura y la excursión siempre estoy conforme con los relatos de Verne. Y apunto una cita que está en el capítulo final y expresa bien lo que uno siente al hacer estos recorridos de su mano: "¡Ah, cuán hermosos son los viajes «hasta cuando se vuelve de ellos»" Mühendislik harikası sayılan bir buharlı gemi: Great Eastern. Yüzlerce insan, farklı düşlerin peşinde, Amerika'ya erişmek üzere bu devasa gemide yolculuk yapmaktadır. Ancak bu Amerika yolculuğu, beklendiği gibi sakin ve sorunsuz geçmeyecektir. Bu yolculuk; yürek karartan kehanetleriyle felaket tellallığı yapan bir doktorun, acılar içindeki yüreğini avutmaya çalışan bir askerin, ruhu kötülük sınırlarını zorlayan bir kumarbazın ve esrarengiz bir kadının kaderini şaşırtıcı bir şekilde kesiştirir. Onlar henüz farkında olmasalar da bu buluşma hayatlarını değiştirecektir. Jules Verne bu romanında, canlı anlatımıyla okuyucuya adeta bir Amerika gezintisi yaptırırken, süprizlerle dolu olaylar dizisi heyecanı dorukta tutuyor. no reviews | add a review
Classic Literature.
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Inspired by his trip aboard "The Great Eastern" ship, Jules Verne writes the adventure novel "A Floating City". The story depicts a wonderful picture of the long sea voyage, the ship which seems so big that it is described as a city, the vivid places and sights that unfold before the passengers and the lasting impressions of New York and Niagara Falls. It is also a story of romance and bravery as a desperate woman who is travelling with her abusive husband finds out that the man she really loves is also on board. Verne gives as well a faithful picture of the usual incidents which occur on such long voyages. What is left for us to do is to immerse is this travel across the Atlantic and find out if everyone is going to make it safely home. - No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)840Literature French & related literatures French literature and literatures of related Romance languagesLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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What is it about?: A Floating City tells the story of a trip across the Atlantic on the steamship Great Eastern, which was by far the largest ship ever built at the time of its launch in 1858. The novel was the direct result of the trip which Verne actually made to America in 1867 on that ship. He gives us a faithful picture of the incidents of an ocean voyage of those days, enlivening these by introducing a romance aboard ship.
This is certainly not among the best-known Verne novels nowadays, although it was quite successful in its time. The novel is told in first person by an unnamed narrator and it has two mayor threads: One of them is a travel narrative, including a description of the ship, of life and entertainment aboard, how periods of bad weather were handled, etc, and the other is a romantic story involving a friend of the narrator who has had his heart broken when his fiancé was married for financial reasons to a morally disreputable man. All the people involved are also traveling on the ship, so the conflict is certain.
The main characters include the unnamed narrator; Captain Fabian Mac Elwyn, his broken-hearted friend; Captain Archibald Corsican, another friend of Fabian's and his regiment mate in the British Indian Army; Ellen Hodges, Fabian's former fiancé; Harry Drake, her villainous husband; and Doctor Pitferge, another friend they make who is convinced that the ship is destined to sink.
I found it a very pleasant read. I enjoyed the travel narrative. Obviously Verne has first-hand experience of this huge ship, so large and with so many passengers that it's compared to a floating town. That personal experience allows for a quite grounded and realistic narration. There are none of the outlandish elements of tales like Around the Moon, where the spaceship feels more like a Victorian sitting-room, or In Search of the Castaways, where the Andes are exaggeratedly depicted as an unstable mountain range filled with active volcanos and huge landslides. And Verne has an engaging way of describing the trip and the ship. I particularly enjoy how earnest he is, and how joyful in front of technical achievements (although there is also an unquiet feeling at how vulnerable even this huge ship is before the natural forces of the ocean).
This is a fast read, with a good pace and some humor in the dialogues. There are none of those Verne scientific info-dumps. The closest thing is the initial description of the ship, but it's handled quite quickly.
The adventure element, involving the narrator's friend and his romantical problems, is also handled well. It's nothing exotic or high concept, like many of Verne's stories, but it does provide tension, conflict and even danger. Funnily enough, even though this is the first time I read this novel, I guessed how this plot thread was going to end, based on my knowledge of Verne's dramatic style and some foreshadowing. Again, it's a satisfying resolution, which is something I have commented in a previous review: Verne knows how to give his readers a good payoff.
Enjoyment factor: This is a short and relatively low-key Verne novel, half romantic adventure and half travel story. I found it quite pleasant. It shows a different side of Verne, almost cosy, without his science-fictional elements, his popular science descriptions and his more intense adventures.
Next up: The Adventures of Three Englishmen and Three Russians in South Africa
See all my Verne reviews here: https://www.sffworld.com/forum/threads/reading-vernes-voyages-extraordinaires.58... ( )