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20000 Leagues Under the Seas (Extended Illustrated And Annotated Edition)
20000 Leagues Under the Seas (Extended Illustrated And Annotated Edition) | Jules Verne
This is the fully illustrated and extended annotated edition including a rare and extensive biographical essay on the author, his life and works plus a wealth of illustrations. 20000 Leagues Under the Seas was one of the first science fiction novels ever and has been a classic in this genre ever since its publication in 1870. It tells the world-famous story of Captain Nemo and his submarine Nautilus and a journey all around the earth.
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AroundTheBookWorld
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Did I not also live this unnatural life for ten months? Thus, to that question asked six thousand years ago by Ecclesiastes, “That which is far off, and exceeding deep, who can find it out?” only two men now have the right to answer: Captain Nemo and myself.
#TwentyThousandLeaguesUnderTheSea #JulesVerne #CaptainNemo #lastline #closingline #book #books #bookvibe #Classic #ScienceFiction #Fiction #Adventure #Fantasy #France #Literature #Audiobook 💕

review
Afonso.Almeida
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Pickpick

In the second half of this novel, Captain Nemo, along with the Nautilus and its hostages, encounter a series of ever so growing perilous encounters. After leaving the Mediterranean, the submarine continues through the Indian Ocean, where Professor Aronnax, Conseil, and Ned Land witness incredible nautical marvels. However, Ned begins to grow impatient of living in the Nautilus. Wanting freedom from his hellish aquatic prison, he plans to escape.

Afonso.Almeida The Nautilus next navigates through dangerous waters, facing dangerous storms, gargantuan underwater creatures, and battle with giant squid. During a pivotal attack on a warship pursuing the Nautilus, Nemo‘s intense hatred surfaces, leaving Aronnax and his companions scarred and contemplating the Captain‘s morality. The story climaxes as the Nautilus enters a whirlpool in Norwegian waters, which imperils the Nautilus. In a close-call escape, 2mo
Afonso.Almeida Aronnax, Conseil, and Ned finally escape the chains they were bound to. The novel closes ambiguously, with Aronnax recounting these incredible adventures he has had in the past ten months, unsure of Captain Nemo‘s ultimate fate or the secrets still hidden at the depths of the sea. 2mo
Afonso.Almeida Isolation in the pursuit of knowledge leads to enlightenment but also alienation. True fulfillment requires not only discovery but also connection to humanity and what is morally right. Captain Nemo uses the Nautilus to futher his knowledge of the country of his adoption, while also enacting his revenge onto those who banished him from their society. Captain Nemo uses his knowledge for morally incorrect reasons, instead of using it as research. (edited) 2mo
See All 6 Comments
Afonso.Almeida If you enjoy this novel, then you are sure to enjoy Moby-Dick by Herman Melville, The Lost World by Arthur Conan Doyle, or Around the World in Eighty Days by Jules Verne. 2mo
Muzzi.Castrodes 😬 🕋 😱 🌸 🚮 ⛔️ 📔 📿 💼 💥 💽 📺 ⚛ 2mo
Afonso.Almeida @Muzzi.Castrodes 🐁 👂 😳 👮 🚰 🍃 🐗 🎑 🌟 🕓 🏔 🛩 ⛄️ 2mo
4 likes6 comments
review
Afonso.Almeida
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Pickpick

In the first half of 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea, the story is told from the first-person point of view of Professor Pierre Aronnax, a French naturalist. The story begins with tales of a mysterious sea creature wreaking havoc to ships at sea, leading to rumours of it being a sea monster. Professor Aronnax, along with his servant Conseil and Canadian harpooner Ned Land, is invited onto the USS Abraham Lincoln to hunt down the creature.

Afonso.Almeida After a long chase, the ship encounters the creature, which is revealed to be a highly advanced submarine called the Nautilus. The ship‘s captain, captain Nemo, reveals that he has renounced the world on the surface, preferring the isolated sea as his home. Captain Nemo shows Professor Aronnax the marvels of the deep seas, along with the submarine‘s technological advancements, that truly were a marvel for its time. The perspective of this story 3mo
Afonso.Almeida Creates immersion in the story that allows the reader to experience the underwater odyssey as though they were there, being a part of Captain Nemo‘s crew. Written in 1870, 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea foretells with uncanny accuracy the scientific inventions of the twentieth century. If you enjoy thrilling dramas, this is an exemplary book to read. 3mo
Daniel Artemenko pretty sigma if u ask me tbh
3mo
Afonso.Almeida @Daniel Artemenko yea okay ponyboy 3mo
Muzzi.Castrodes stop arguing this is bad 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭 3mo
5 likes5 comments
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ManyWordsLater
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Feel free to like or comment on my accomplishment.

🤓😋🤪😜😝🤓😋🤪

Jari-chan Congratulations 🎉 5mo
BookmarkTavern Woohoo! 🎉🎉🎉 5mo
julesG 🎉🎉 5mo
Librarybelle Congratulations! 5mo
Ruthiella Congratulations! 🥳 5mo
54 likes5 comments
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TheSpineView
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55 likes1 stack add2 comments
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bookwyrm7
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Poor Conseil 😂
And poor hotel employees who'll have to feed a babirusa haha
(and poor babirusa that has to live in a hotel 🤣)

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bookwyrm7
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"In him I had an extremely capable specialist in natural history classification who could scale with the agility of a circus performer the ladder of branches, groups, classes, sub-classes, orders, families, genera, subgenera, species and varieties."

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bookwyrm7
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Finally starting this beauty! 😍
#HyggeHourReadathon

TheBookHippie Oh it‘s so pretty!!! 7mo
AllDebooks That cover 😍 7mo
11 likes2 comments
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bookwyrm7
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Have you ever passed by a book that you just had to have? How was I supposed to leave this gorgeous edition of Jules Verne's "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea" behind in the shop? Impossible!
Also, how amazing is this Penguin series of clothbound classics? I'm in love ?
Gotta "catch'em all" now ?

review
Robotswithpersonality
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Mehso-so

I think what's most remarkable is how much of this book can still be full of (fictional?) wonders for the average modern reader, the bottom of the ocean has not become less remote a prospect for most to explore despite 150 years of scientific and technological progress. 1/?

Robotswithpersonality 2/? That being said, if you like detailed descriptions of ocean life, on repeat, with scientific calculations and recountings of history, you'll have a better chance of enjoying this book than if you go in looking for an adventure story. The ratio leans heavily towards observations and discussion, rather than action - which doesn't stop Verne from jam-packing the last eighth with some memorable episodes. 7mo
Robotswithpersonality 3/? I appreciate that mystery remains regarding the figure of Captain Nemo, though his convenient metamorphosis from amiable tyrant happy to discuss ship, navigation and ocean to anguished obsessive bent on vengeance felt a bit abrupt. 7mo
Robotswithpersonality 4/? Following the science was also tricky because after this many decades, without setting myself a research project, where is the line drawn between what is fictional and what has simply been disproven in the interim? I just felt disengaged from so much of that content because I couldn't float along clearly on 'suspended disbelief' or 'nifty facts discovered'.
7mo
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Robotswithpersonality 5/? Did make me sad to see the narrator recount the many species in the sea, the clarity of the water. What a difference a century and half of humanity has made (even if I don't subscribe to Nemo's misanthropy).
The promise of knowledge versus the chance at freedom is not a dichotomy I've seen presented so thoroughly as a character dilemma before, so convincingly, it added admirable tension to the narrative.
7mo
Robotswithpersonality 6/? Ned and Conseil are occasionally amusing interlocutors, but Conseil is too often servile as an identity and Ned is too often a wet blanket or point of friction stereotype to make for fully fleshed out characters. (edited) 7mo
Robotswithpersonality 7/8 One last thing, because I'd like to believe I'm not the only one who had this wrong based on the title:
Leagues is primarily a distance measurement, they mostly used yards for depth, so it's not 20,000 leagues straight down, it's that they were underwater, traveling around various oceans at various depths for 20,000 leagues distance. You're welcome. 💁🏼‍♂️
7mo
Robotswithpersonality 8/8 ⚠️Outdated and offensive terms for Black and Indigenous peoples used, a lot of discussion of all the animals which can be and are caught and eaten, (some butchery involved); assessing various ocean life for purely commercial value, lot of 'this guy 'discovered' this place', as well as explorer history; tries to mash together Biblical creationism/ Bible history with actual science/history on occasion- never a comfortable mix 7mo
Karisimo I think Rick Riordan did a good job bringing it back to life in his middle grade book 7mo
Lunakay Great review, I recently finished this as well and agree with all your assessments. Also recommend Riordan's modern version which picks up both, this book and the follow up 7mo
10 likes9 comments
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Robotswithpersonality
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Interesting to see the cognitive dissonance at work in the characters that history shows on repeat: 'Don't hunt that for sport, it's endangered, but do hunt that, we want (don't NEED) to eat it, or that, because there's profit and plenty and we'll never run out.' 🤦🏼‍♂️

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Robotswithpersonality
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150 years ago, maybe...😞

Bookwomble Verne reckoned without rapacious capitalism 😕 8mo
Robotswithpersonality @bookwomble Chills me further to see how frequently the characters commodify the oceans' wonders, they look for food or profit in much of what they discover, the blueprint for that disastrous model for consumption is already laid down...it just hasn't reached modern scale yet. 😨 7mo
Bookwomble @Robotswithpersonality It was already going on with commercial whaling. Only the discovery of commercial extraction of cheaper mineral oil saved whales from extinction. 7mo
9 likes3 comments
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Robotswithpersonality
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Poor M. Aronnax. Compilation of 'the shark bit'. 🤭🦈

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Robotswithpersonality
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Well that's one perspective. 🙄

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Robotswithpersonality
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You...kicked it? Well, what is the process of scientific discovery but 'fuck around and find out' by another name?! 🤷🏼‍♂️🤦🏼‍♂️

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Robotswithpersonality
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Having trouble nailing down a historical reference. Was there some precursor to night-vision goggles utilitized in the 1800s?!

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Robotswithpersonality
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You can't blame Jules, he wasn't to know how language would change. 🤭 Maybe it wouldn't look as naughty in the original French. 🤷🏼‍♂️

BarbaraJean 😂 😂 8mo
8 likes1 comment
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Robotswithpersonality
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We're all capable of being credulous, just less so in our own field of study.

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Robotswithpersonality
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Current reads: A tentacular theme, fiction and non-fiction. 🐙
Also enjoying the 'muted-tones illustration' commonality in cover aesthetics.

emz711 So cool! 🐙 8mo
13 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
ElizaMarie
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Bailedbailed

So, I tried, but I did not want to pick this one up when I had time to read. I felt like there might have been a “good“ story in there, but all the jargon and just info dump took me out of the story that was trying to develop. So.... #DNF

#ReadYourKindle
@CBee

Got this magnet at Mystic Aquarium, thought it was super cute :)

CatLass007 Great magnet! 9mo
dabbe #hailthebail! 🤩🤩🤩 9mo
CBee Love the magnet! 9mo
35 likes3 comments
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ElizaMarie
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Hmm. This might not even get to 20% mark

dabbe #hailthebail! 🤩🤩🤩 9mo
ElizaMarie @dabbe YES !!! Thanks! I have decided it is time to #DNF this one; I had the time/option to use my Kindle on my phone yesterday, and instead of trying to read a chapter of this one, I decided to start a whole new book; this is a “sign“ to #Bail! 9mo
25 likes2 comments
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ElizaMarie
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#ReadYourKindle
@CBee

I have always been interested in this particular subject.

CBee I love your graphic 👍🏻 10mo
ElizaMarie @CBee Ooo thanks! 10mo
26 likes2 comments
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ravenlee
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Mehso-so

Woohee…the book itself is ok. You know how sometimes a character asks a question just so someone else can show off in their answer, to show off how smart the author is? Welcome to this book. “I‘m Jules Verne and I did tons of marine research for this book so here it is” info dump, over and over. The voyage itself was actually interesting, but it was maybe 20% of the book. No idea how this is a “classic,” TBH. 👇🏻

ravenlee This audio version specifically is a mess. Chapters out of order is the least of it. Worst narrator ever. She mispronounced everything! Including salmon, incomparable, and Glasgow 😳. Also, for some inexplicable reason she gave Ned Land, Canadian, specifically from Quebec, this weird hillbilly accent?! I can‘t even… 1y
ravenlee My biggest complaint about the book itself is the ending. Very much like Verne couldn‘t figure out how to get out of the corner he painted himself into regarding Nemo, so he just…didn‘t. Irritating. 1y
ravenlee #dannyboy #catsoflitsy Cat tax, as Danny‘s the most interesting thing around me at the moment. 1y
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dabbe Hello there, Darling Danny! 🖤🐾🖤 1y
Ruthiella I agree. I must have read an abridged version as a child because when I reread it as an adult, I was so BORED by the endless description… I remember liking Mysterious Island a lot, which is kind of a sequel (to Nemo‘s story, not the Professor‘s). (edited) 1y
Crazeedi Love kitty's white paws! 1y
37 likes6 comments
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Yuki_Onna
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20000 Leagues under the seas is the book I'm currently reading.

And - NO. I don't relate to any of the characters in this book. In fact, I passionately dislike most of them. It doesn't matter to me all the characters in this book are men so far. (Wow, I just realised not a single woman showed up or was even only mentioned in this book yet... Talk about patrialism in the 19th century 😅)
But that alone wouldn't matter to me. ⤵️

Yuki_Onna I'm not that feminist usually - I normally can relate to male characters as well. I don't care about the sex of people/characters to be able to relate to them.
Males can be positive & wonderful and females can be awful & terrible. Being a man doesn't make you a repressive backwards person & being a woman doesn't make you a wonderful progressive beautiful person by default, as so many radically feminist people nowadays seem to believe. ⤵️
1y
Yuki_Onna I've met many beautiful clever wonderful & supporting men in my life and a few absolutely obnoxious repressive women, ugly from the inside (and outside sometimes) who had their part in abusing me and who nearly ruined all my life - I still struggle with overcoming their horrible impact on me.
So I'm not that firm a believer in feminism - at least not in the notion that 'old white men' should be inferior and more backwards to women by default. ⤵️
1y
Yuki_Onna THAT book, though... It is the epitome of backwards patriarchy and of male supremacy theories.
So far, again, not a single female has even been mentioned! 🫠
And the characters in this monstrous tome - I cannot relate to a single one of them. Not because they are all male, but because they are all so righteous. And boring. And backwards. And bigoted. And full of themselves and their importance.😑☠
(edited) 1y
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Yuki_Onna And Captain Ahab - whom every reader apparently is supposed to adore - is the most bigoted hypocrite of them all. I absolutely loathe him with a vengeance.

So - after a long rant😅 - no!!! I do not relate to any of the characters in this book. It doesn't matter whether they are male or female, even if they were asexual aliens or some kind of rock species.
They are all so arrogant and know-it-all and above everybody else it just sucks. 🤮
⤵️
(edited) 1y
Yuki_Onna #SundayFunday #classics #patriarchy
@ozma.of.oz Thank you Krysta for giving me the opportunity to vent my anger about this peace of world literature I seem to not particularly enjoy! 🤣👏
1y
BookmarkTavern LOL That was a fun rant to read! I‘d recommend giving this tagged book a try. It‘s middle grade, but it‘s a modern sequel-ish to 20,000 Leagues and it is delightful. Thanks for sharing! (edited) 1y
16 likes6 comments
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ravenlee
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What the hell?

Just went from Pt 1 Ch 19 to Pt 2 Ch 3, and from here on out the chapters bounce all over the place.

I tried a different audio version, and the narrator was great! But there was no table of contents so no way to jump to where I left off and I am absolutely not starting over. 😫

IndoorDame 😵‍💫😵‍💫😵‍💫 1y
Ruthiella That‘s happened to me before too. I can‘t remember what book, though. 😢 1y
LiteraryinPA Weeeeeird 1y
26 likes3 comments
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ravenlee

Continuing with this audiobook, the narrator has also mispronounced aquatic (sounds like a duck in the middle), echinoderm (with a sh- instead of a -k), and I suspect multiple marine species but can‘t confirm any of them. How can a narrator of a book about undersea voyaging mispronounce aquatic? A lot of this is just rolling past my ears at this point, but to be honest it probably would anyway. 🤷🏻‍♀️

julesG 😖🙉 1y
23 likes1 comment
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ravenlee
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I‘ve been reading this as an audiobook while I get some chores done, so the first time I opened my print copy to figure out where I am I was pretty surprised to see the difference in translations, just in the table of contents. I hope when I pick it up it won‘t be too hard to switch.

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AroundTheBookWorld
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The year 1866 was marked by a strange event, an unexplainable occurrence which is undoubtedly still fresh in everyone‘s memory. Those living in coastal towns or in the interior continents were aroused by all sorts of rumors; but it was seafaring people who were particularly excited.
#20000LeaguesUmderTheSea #JulesVerne #CaptainNemo #firstline #openingline #Classics #ScienceFiction #Fiction #Adventure #Fantasy #France #Literature #Steampunk ❤️‍🔥🦑

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ravenlee
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I‘m trying out this audiobook (I‘ve read very few audiobooks but I‘m still trying) to get some stuff done while kiddo is at dance camp.

At the 20% point, the narrator has mispronounced the composers Wagner and Weber, Senegal, comparable, and, most egregiously and frequently for this particular book, mollusk. It‘s driving me slowly insane.

NatalieR 😅 I totally understand your pain! 1y
TheAromaofBooks Oh dear. This seems like it would be a rather ponderous audiobook in the best of times - when I read it in physical form I'm able to skim through all the paragraphs that say things like, “we were at 40* 38' west of the French toast current“ 😂 1y
ravenlee @TheAromaofBooks I will admit to a certain amount of zoning out so far, then snapping back in with a little anxiety, only to realize we‘re still talking about the tropic of Cancer or whatever. 1y
Clare-Dragonfly OK, I had to go look up “mollusk” to see if I‘ve been pronouncing it correctly, and now that I know I have… how on earth is this narrator pronouncing it?! 1y
ravenlee @Clare-Dragonfly muh-LUSK, and apparently it shows up all. The. Time. In this book. 1y
36 likes5 comments
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Super_Jane
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Panpan

2.75/5 🌕🌕🌖🌑🌑 #classic #sciencefiction

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Astroneman
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Pickpick
IuliaC A classic 2y
Astroneman @IuliaC yes I love classic books 2y
IuliaC @Astroneman me too 😊 they're classics for very good reasons 2y
25 likes3 comments
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TheNeverendingTBR
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Panpan

Very slow, with minimal action.

In other words, this was an absolute snoozefest.

youneverarrived Love this review 😂😂 2y
TheNeverendingTBR @youneverarrived I guess I just assumed this was going to be something else entirely. 🥴 2y
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bookish6
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I always thought this book was about a giant squid 😅
It was not my type of book but definitely interesting.
Kind of makes you feel claustrophobic

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Oryx
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Book mail! A freebie from Penguin bookmarks - I love the cover of this 🎐 One I read as a teenager and really had fun with it. Nice to have such a gorgeous copy.

BookwormM Pretty 2y
Caroline2 Oh nice! That really is a lovely edition. I choose Middlemarch which is also hugeeeeee!! 😆 (edited) 2y
57 likes2 comments
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gilroyc

Also reading this ebook

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Christyco125
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Bailedbailed

I tried for a few weeks but in the end I gave in. I made about 50% and realized I had a completely different expectation of the book that it just wasn‘t meeting. So I‘ll need to go back to drawing board for the #Booked2022 Nautical Adventure prompt.

Cinfhen Ugh. Sorry it didn‘t work 😓u can still count it towards your challenge 3y
Christyco125 @Cinfhen Thanks. I‘m a completer so DNF are extra hard. 3y
Cinfhen I hear you!! 3y
Smarkies I bailed on my nautical book as well. I think I have a new one picked out. 3y
45 likes1 stack add4 comments
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Christyco125
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The year 1866 was signalised by a remarkable incident, a mysterious and puzzling phenomenon, which doubtless no has yet forgotten.

#FirstLineFridays

Taking on a classic to knock one of the #Booked2022 prompts out.

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VioletMoonBooks
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Did I not also live this unnatural life for ten months? Thus, to that question asked six thousand years ago by Ecclesiastes, “That which is far off, and exceeding deep, who can find it out?” only two men now have the right to answer: Captain Nemo and myself.
#20000LeaguesUnderTheSea #JulesVerne #lastline #closingline #book #books #bookvibe #bookvibes #bookvsfilm #bookvsmovie #bookbag #bookbags #bookbeau #Classics #ScienceFiction #Fiction 💝💝💝💝

27 likes1 stack add
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Christyco125
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📖 I‘m reading Sanditon with the #Pemberlittens but I also read a Jane Austen book every year.

📖 I‘m looking forward to reading the tagged book for a prompt for #Booked2022

#Two4Tuesday @TheSpineView

Want to play:

TheSpineView Good choice for #Booked2022. Thanks for playing! 3y
rwmg It depends on your definition of classic, I suppose. I'm going to say Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's “The Sign of the Four“.

For one I would like to read, I am going to choose “The Adventures of Roderick Random“ by Tobias Smollett.

3y
Christyco125 I like the sound of Roderick Random. I‘m going to have to look that one up @rwmg 3y
41 likes4 comments
review
MariaW
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Mehso-so

Finally finished this one - a classic everyone knows, but only a few have read. I‘ve read the original translation which made it difficult sometimes (the German language changed a lot ever since). In general, every chapter is mini adventure on the Nautilus, which I liked. But there are a lot of descriptions of the underwater flora and fauna, sometimes too many and too detailed. And the ending was very aprupt and left questions open.

Ruthiella The details were too much for me too when I re-read it a few years ago. I strongly suspect that I read an abridged version as a kid! 3y
MariaW @Ruthiella Me too 😊 3y
55 likes2 comments
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MariaW
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This “original” (now original ebook) version comes along with a lot of illustrations which help the reader to imagine the characters and the events. 😊

catsuit_mango I loved the illustrated hardback editions of Verne novels as a kid, so glad the library had a nice edition 3y
44 likes1 comment
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yoavshai
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#BookCoverChallenge
Day 59.
Here I will note 365 books (or as many as I will have before I get tired) that have shaped my taste in literature. No explanations, no reviews. Just the cover of the book.
I do not challenge anyone. You are all welcome to take part.

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devil_number3
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"The sea was distinctly visible for a mile all round the Nautilus. What a spectacle! What pen can describe it? Who could paint the effects of the light through those transparent sheets of water, and the softness of the successive gradations from the lower to the superior strata of the ocean?"
I'd started re-reading it, leaving it here. The first time I read, I missed not a word. I was eleven and understood only some of the complicated terms in it.

devil_number3 I never finished re-reading because I realised that I remember most of what happened 3y
4 likes1 stack add1 comment
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bookishbitch
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I'm listening to this on Spotify because it's a classic I've always been interested in. I'm considering DNFing though because I'm bored. However, maybe the next half is better? I only listen when I'm washing dishes though so at least I'm not wasting time.

SpaceCowboyBooks The sequel is really good 4y
bookishbitch @SpaceCowboyBooks I had no idea there was a sequel. Thanks for the info! 4y
SpaceCowboyBooks You're welcome. It's called Mysterious Island. There's a fum movie version too, with effects by Harryhausen 4y
10 likes3 comments
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VioletMoonBooks
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review
Paperback.Propensity
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Pickpick

What an adventure! Jules Verne has yet to disappoint me.

20 likes2 stack adds
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Eggs
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Written in 1870, this is the story of Captain Nemo and his submarine Nautilus, as seen from the perspective of Professor Pierre Aronnax after he, his servant Conseil, and Canadian harpoonist Ned Land wash up on their ship. #underwater #scifiseptember @Klou

Klou This is a story I've heard of but haven't read. I remember when this story came into the TV show 'Once Upon a Time', I was so confused when the character Nemo wasn't a clown fish 😂😂😂 looking it up led me to the book. 4y
Eggs 🤗😂😊 @Klou 4y
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review
Sarahreadstoomuch
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Bailedbailed

The last prompt I need to read for #bbrc is #middlegrade #realclassic. I‘ve tried to finish this over the past 2 or 3 months and I just can‘t! I‘ve tried audio, print, even this abridged print and I just can‘t stick with it AT ALL. Hopefully can find something else in the next couple weeks before the challenge ends!

Sarahreadstoomuch Also curious @LibrarianRyan , will you be doing this again? Do you need some help? 5y
LibrarianRyan I hadn‘t really decided. I can. I really like it. Some section like picture books I plan to keep. Maybe require they be reverse reads. It‘s on my to do list for the weekend. If you want to help we can do it together. 5y
LibrarianRyan BTW I understand the 20,000 thing. It took me FOREVER to finish. It was so much slower than I thought. The movie is much better. 5y
Sarahreadstoomuch @LibrarianRyan I‘m happy to help! This really has been my favorite challenge.. I really appreciated getting back in touch with children‘s books again! But I understand that hosting something like this is a lot, so really, I‘m happy to help. I think I have your email... 5y
LibrarianRyan @Sarahreadstoomuch I have to take my brother in law shopping so I‘ll have a lot of down time in between stops (first stop glasses which is when I was going to get started. My email is missryanaf@gmail.com 5y
21 likes5 comments
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Shemac77
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Pickpick

Jules Verne was ahead of his time. Great read.

wanderinglynn Beautiful edition! 😍 5y
Seekingtardis I‘m gonna need this edition too!! 😍😍 5y
55 likes2 stack adds2 comments