Download Free Audio Journey to the Center of the Earth (Extraordinary Voyages #3) Books
Journey to the Center of the Earth (Extraordinary Voyages #3) Paperback | Pages: 240 pages
Rating: 3.86 | 140507 Users | 4837 Reviews

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Original Title: Voyage au centre de la Terre
ISBN: 0553213970 (ISBN13: 9780553213973)
Edition Language: English
Series: Extraordinary Voyages #3, La biblioteca dei viaggi straordinari #1
Characters: Axel, Otto Liedenbrock, Hans Bjelke, Gräuben
Setting: Hamburg,1863(Germany) Reykjavik (Reykjavík),1863(Iceland) Snæfellsjökull,1863(Iceland) …more Inside Earth,1863 Stromboli,1863(Italy) …less

Narration As Books Journey to the Center of the Earth (Extraordinary Voyages #3)

The intrepid Professor Liedenbrock 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.

List Regarding Books Journey to the Center of the Earth (Extraordinary Voyages #3)

Title:Journey to the Center of the Earth (Extraordinary Voyages #3)
Author:Jules Verne
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 240 pages
Published:April 25th 2006 by Bantam (first published November 25th 1864)
Categories:Fiction. Adventure. Fantasy. Classics. Cultural. France. Science Fiction

Rating Regarding Books Journey to the Center of the Earth (Extraordinary Voyages #3)
Ratings: 3.86 From 140507 Users | 4837 Reviews

Discuss Regarding Books Journey to the Center of the Earth (Extraordinary Voyages #3)
I read this because a modern kindle (The Maw, by Taylor Zajonc), which I finished reading just before this, quotes from it extensively, and obviously took it as its inspiration. The Maw was an adventure tale exploring a supercave in Africa, on the trail of a famous - but of tainted repute - explorer who was lost with no trace a century earlier. Verne's tale is an adventure tale exploring a supercave system, whose expedition was launched based on the lost hints of a learned man who had fallen

When I go on a Great Adventure, I like to bring a book with me which also chronicles a great adventure. This is for two reasons; first, to urge me on in my own adventure and push the boundaries of what is expected on said adventure, and second, to give me something entertaining to read about a great adventure should mine turn out less than spectacular. After reading From The Earth To The Moon by Verne and finding it totally awesome, I figured another Verne story couldnt go astray to satisfy

A flat, disappointing story populated with one-dimensional characters that I grew to dislike.The narrator is a whiny young man prone to fainting and with very little backbone who does not, in fact, want to be on this adventure. I hated his uncle, the scientist, who is a pedantic, paternalistic know-it-all, so utterly absorbed in his own work and importance that he's oblivious to the feelings and desires of people around him. Their guide, an Icelandic eider-down hunter, has zero personality and

It was a pure joy to read this wonderful story of adventure, I felt entertained the whole way through.I loved the characters, the writing style and the plot so incredibly much. I can't even explain why, I just had a good feeling every time I picked up this book.

This book is so good it's almost on the level of the Scrooge McDuck comic based on it!



This oldie but goody was a major thrill ride. While I was listening I kept getting lost in the story. But then again I love Science, so the whole story fascinated me. Possible spoiler...And because of my love for Science I was able to predict where the voyagers in the story ended up before Verne revealed the location in the narrative.In my opinion, Vernes stories never get old. They are as fresh and exciting as they were when they were first published in the 19th Century.

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