Michael Dirda uses the occasion of a review of Jules Verne's The Begum's Millions to argue for a reappraisal of Verne's body of work.
To read Jules Verne is one of the great treats of childhood. To read Jules Verne later in life is to discover a writer just as satisfying but even richer, one who is not only a natural storyteller but also a mythmaker, a social critic and an innovative artist. In France, Verne is now studied as a major literary figure, and thanks to fresh translations – from Penguin and university presses at Indiana and Nebraska, as well as Wesleyan – more and more of his work is available to American readers in reliable texts. Give “The Begum’s Millions” or one of the other novels a try. There’s a lot more to Jules Verne than what you find in those old, albeit quite wonderful, Disney movies.
We're especially partial to Verne's less well-known Paris in the Twentieth Century. He predicts almost everything except for well, you know, collaboration, DeGaulle and the whole Jerry Lewis thing.
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