Jules
Verne lived, in the latter part of his life, in Amiens, north of Paris. I live
in France now, but do not have a car. But I can get from Strasbourg to Amiens
by train, some of it really high speed—something that would have fascinated
Jules Verne, though not quite as much as the digital camera on which I made this video.
For
those few of you who do not already know it, Jules Verne was one of the
greatest French writers. He is often considered the father of science fiction
or science adventure. This is certainly the case with his most famous novel, Twenty
Thousand Leagues under the Sea. The English translation was one of the
first books I read that was not a little kid book, when I was in sixth grade. I
was fascinated by all of the things Professor Arronax saw while on board the
submarine Nautilus. I was also fascinated by the complex psychology of Captain
Nemo (nemo means nobody) who used his submarine as a weapon
against all of civilized mankind. The ending was so gripping that I had to read
it three times. He also wrote From the Earth to the Moon. This is also
easy to classify as science fiction. He also wrote some speculative fiction,
such as Paris in the Twentieth Century, a work that did not see the
light of day until it was found in a locked drawer after his death.
But
readers were and are puzzled by some of his topics. How to explain, for
example, Carpathian Castle? A lovelorn youth yearned for a beautiful
woman who sang beautifully. When he climbed up to a mysterious castle in the
Carpathian Mountains of Romania (Transylvania, in fact), he saw her, and heard
her singing. Science fiction? Only in the sense that he was seeing a slide
projection of her and hearing her voice on a phonograph, both of which were
existing technologies when Verne wrote the novel.
While
moon rockets and submarines were technological fiction from Verne’s imaginary
future, other things were well in the past. People have puzzled at the novel Michael
Strogoff about the czar’s courier carrying a message across Siberia.
Adventure, yes, but not new technology, just as montgolfière balloons were not
new when he wrote Five Weeks in a Balloon. But Michael Strogoff
and Five Weeks fit right in with the other books in being an adventure
that filled in big empty spaces on the map.
In
each of his novels, most of which are still in circulation, his adventures were
driven by character and struggle—like most other novels. What made Verne’s
stand out is that the adventure was not all human drama: Verne added in the
wonders of nature as well. The world is full of marvels, not just human
struggles.
But
these adventures had to be believable. The one exception to this pattern that I
have found is Master of the World, in which an incredibly brilliant and
evil man invented a machine that was a fast car when on land, an airplane while
in the air, and a submarine while underwater. At least, I did not find this
compelling, nor did the possible handful of other people who have read it.
I
got to see Verne’s writing desk, at which he labored for many hours every day.
I saw his telescope and globe. What I remember most, however, is his card file.
I had one of those when I was in graduate school. In case you don’t know it,
that is what we used as an information retrieval system before the interweb.
Verne
was incredibly famous during his life. But movies were just becoming popular
when he died. He could not have imagined how many movies, in how many
countries, were made from his writings.
For
the readers of this religion blog, I will add that Jules Verne was strongly
affected by the American civil war, and by the emancipation of slaves. Some of
his lesser-known novels are about abolitionism, and one of the heroes of
Mysterious Island was a runaway slave named Neb.
Visiting
the Jules Verne house and museum was one of the things on my short bucket list.
But it is amazing only to those of us who grew up admiring Jules Verne.