Journey to the Center of the Earth by Davis Worth Miller (Retold by), Katherine McLean Brevard (Retold by), Jules Verne (Based On Work by)

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Synopsis

The intrepid Professor Lindenbrock embarks upon the strangest expedition of the nineteenth century: a journey down an extinct Icelandic volcano to the Earth’s very core. In his quest to penetrate the planet’s primordial secrets, the geologist—together with his quaking nephew Axel and their devoted guide, Hans—discovers an astonishing subterranean menagerie of prehistoric proportions. Verne’s imaginative tale is at once the ultimate science fiction adventure and a reflection on the perfectibility of human understanding and the psychology of the questor. As David Brin notes in his Introduction, though Verne never knew the term “science fiction,” Journey to the Centre of the Earth is “inarguably one of the wellsprings from which it all began.”

Annotation

A team of explorers makes an expedition into a crater in Iceland which leads to the center of the earth and to incredible and horrifying discoveries.

Children's Literature

The first English translation of Jules Verne's classic science fiction adventure story appeared in 1871. Reluctant Harry and his determined uncle, Professor Hardwigg, decipher a mysterious note from a sixteenth-century Icelandic chemist that leads them to a crater in Iceland. Accompanied by Hans, a local guide, they descend from the crater into the very center of the Earth. The companions eventually find themselves in a mushroom forest on the shores of an immense underground sea. Henry, the Professor, and Hans sail across on a raft, surviving a storm and witnessing a battle between prehistoric sea monsters. On the opposite shore, they flee from primitive giants herding mastodons. When they find their route back to the surface blocked by fallen rock, the Professor uses dynamite to blast through. The sea, pouring into the hole, sweeps them out through another volcano. Three months after entering the Icelandic crater, they find they have journeyed 3,600 miles through the center of the Earth to Mount Aetna, Italy. This adaptation, part of the "Great Illustrated Classics" series, shortens the original tale and simplifies Verne's nineteenth-century flourishes. "Scarcely had his heavy feet resounded within our joint domicile than he shouted for me to attend upon him" is mercifully reduced to, "When he came home one day and began to call..." Still, the language retains an antique flavor, and the simple, black and white illustrations have the look of an old-fashioned comic strip. This edition should appeal to middle-grade readers seeking an action-packed classic. 2002 (orig. 1871), ABDO Publishing, Turner

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Biography

David Brin is the Hugo Award–winning author of fifteen bestselling novels and collections, including Earth, The Postman, and the Uplift saga. His nonfiction book, The Transparent Society, won the American Library Association’s Obeler Freedom of Speech Award.

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