crystalstarrlight's review against another edition

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3.0

Professor Pierre Arronax and his assistant, Conseil, join the crew of the Abraham Lincoln to chase down this strange ocean mammal that has been destroying ships. The duo, along with harpooner Ned Land, end up overboard and rescued by what is revealed to be a submarine, not a mammal. This submarine is captained by Nemo, a mysterious man who has eschewed the land in preference to roaming the open seas. Nemo takes the trio twenty thousand leagues across the seas - from the Pacific to the Indian to the Mediterranean to the Atlantic. Along the way, Arronax uncovers bits and pieces about his captain and catalogs the various fish he sees.

Jules Verne is basically the Father of Science Fiction. His novels - such as "Twenty Thousand Leagues" - were groundbreaking for their time. I'd go so far to say that if it weren't for him, we wouldn't have the science fiction genre at all.

That said, this book was supremely dry and dull most of the time. Yes, it is "hard science fiction" with lots of attention to detail to the mechanics of underwater "sailing" (some of which is incredibly on the mark; others, such as the lamp lighting the way of the Nautilus, laughable and out-dated), but there comes a point when enough is enough. This is particularly prevalent when Arronax/Verne spends multiple pages describing the flora and fauna of the sea in intricate detail ("cataloging fish" into their species and genus) or having long conversations with other characters about irrelevant history (such as the electric cable stretching from the Americas to Ireland).

Again, I greatly appreciate the attention to detail and the thought Verne put into the operation of the Nautilus. That isn't my problem. And I don't mind some detail about the sights Arronax sees while traveling. But the latter in particular "sinks" the story. And when the story is as diluted and sparse as it is here, that is nearly a death warrant.

The majority of this novel reads as a travelogue, Google Maps directions, an account of someone's rather dull vacation. While there are a few scenes that are particularly interesting (the journey to the Antarctic and nearly being trapped underwater, a way too short squid attack, and some walking underwater scenes), by far most of the book is cataloging fish or boring "and on Mar 21st, we sailed from X in Y direction to Z". Yawn. What makes this is even more ridiculous is that Arronax, Ned Land, and Conseil are supposedly held prisoner aboard the Nautilus, so they do not leave and divulge its secrets elsewhere, but no one seems to care about being held against their will until suddenly they are. I'd say "Stockholm Syndrome", only they give a half-hearted struggle when Captain Nemo tells them they are stuck on the ship. Based on how it is written and how little concern these characters have to their captivity, I don't know why Verne didn't just have Captain Nemo invite Arronax to journey with him and maybe decide that he didn't WANT them to leave.

The only (and by far the best) character in this book is Captain Nemo. Sure, there is Arronax, Conseil, and Ned Land, but calling them "characters" is a stretch, unless you are using the most generous of definitions of "character". Arronax is probably the best of the trio. He has some moments of humor (as a side note, there is quite a bit of humor, and it is well applied and a good break from the blandness of most of the text) and has a complicated relationship with Nemo. Ned Land would be next. His sole character trait is wanting to kill anything that moves - whales, kangaroo, tigers, you name it. Pretty much any time he appears in the story, it's to talk about wanting to kill something or escape (and honestly, he doesn't even CONSIDER escape until the last 75% of the novel). The absolute worst character, in my opinion, is Conseil. The guy makes Saltine Crackers look like they aren't bland. If you want a cold, blindly loyal servant, this is your man.

But I hesitate to blame this lack of characterization on Verne's skill as an author or the standard "But it's hard scifi, not a character study!", particularly when you have the complex character of Captain Nemo. What the other characters aren't, Captain Nemo is. Apparently, something bad happened to his wife and his children - something bad enough to make him abandon the land all together and sail in his boat, enacting revenge on passing ships. But he isn't a cold blooded killer - he stays Ned Land's hand, when Ned wants to harpoon a bunch of whales for the hell of it. (Of course, not more than a couple of paragraphs later, Nemo then slaughters a bunch of "sperm whales", so calling the guy a hypocrite is definitely in order.)

So the story is meh, the characters are meh, and the descriptions are overboard. Part of that is just me not really being that hot on the book (my dad, a retired Navy submariner, and my sister both ADORE this book and think I am mad for not). That's only a small part of "Twenty Thousand Leagues". The more important part - and the reason I think that any fan of scifi should read this book - is its influence on the genre. This is the great-great-great-great grandfather of novels like "Ender's Game" and "2001: A Space Odyssey". So in that regard, this book is priceless - it gives me a better respect for the genre I love.

dizzyupthegirl's review against another edition

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adventurous

3.75

readatron3000's review against another edition

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adventurous informative slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A

3.0

marie_90's review against another edition

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adventurous informative mysterious slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

3.5

The journey on and under the surface of oceans wakes desire to explore on your own. Verne describes the world of sea very detailed. This is a book where you actually see while reading :) 
The different adventures the protagonists experience portray fears and thoughts of the time very well. Overall an interesting, great read. 

lauraborkpower's review against another edition

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4.0

I adore this story. I love stories that take place on submarines, so this is right up my alley. It's also an honest-to-goodness adventure and a helluva lot of fun to read.

gigabedi's review against another edition

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adventurous informative mysterious reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

cator_and_bliss's review against another edition

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3.0

Actually rather odd. I was expecting a novel of adventure but found a novel of exploration, which is a rather different thing. Aside from Nemo's 'imprisonment' of Arronax, Conseil and Land and a handful of swiftly resolved incidents, there's very little in the way of threat and jeopardy. Instead, much of the novel is devoted to the simple exploration of the undersea world, amid page after page after page of marine taxonomy.

Remember the old idea that JRR Tolkien invented a language and then built a story in which to house it? This book made me think that Verne tried a similar trick with biological classification in place of Elvish.

Not a bad book overall, and the exploration is entertaining enough, but somewhat uncanny all the same.

Oh, and I wanted to slap Conseil by about the eighth chapter. Twenty thousand leagues under the sea and he's the wettest thing in it.

jimbowen0306's review against another edition

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1.0

I’m not going to lie, this book irritated me. It’s a sort of mix of a travel guide, biology textbook, and adventure story, and sees a French biologist-cum-sort of anthropologist be asked to try and kill a sea serpent that is attacking shipping. While he is doing this, he’s captured by what turns out to be a submarine, and spends most of the rest of the book going on underwater experiences, while being driven round the world on the sub.

The attempts to catch the sub were good, but once on the boat, it turns into a really, really dull travel guide, and biology textbook, as he describes where his characters go, and what they see. It might be worth reading an abridged version of the book, because you might end up thinking “Oh for God’s sake, get to the point” less often.

story_singer_101's review against another edition

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adventurous slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? N/A

3.75

joaosilva's review against another edition

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slow-paced

2.0