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Carregando... Robur the Conqueror / Master of the Worldde Jules Verne
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Pertence à sérieRobur the Conqueror (omnibus) Pertence à série publicadaDie grosse Jules Verne Ausgabe (Band 10)
Jules Verne was a French writer; born in Nantes, February 8, 1828. He was educated in his native town; studied law in Paris, where he devoted much attention to dramatic literature. His comedy, Les Pailles Rompues, was performed at the Gymnase in 1850, and Onze Tours de Liege followed. His fame rests upon his scientific romances, which have a touch of extravagance in their treatment. His works, which are widely read, have been translated into English. Among his works are: Five Weeks in a Balloon (1870); A Journey to the Center of the Earth (1872); Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1873); Meridiana, the Adventures of Three Englishmen and Three Russians in South Africa (1873); From the Earth to the Moon Direct in Ninety-seven Hours, Twenty Minutes, and a Trip Round It (1873); The Fur Country, or Seventy Degrees North Latitude (1874); Around the World in Eighty Days (1874); A Floating City and The Blockade Runners (1874); The English at the North Pole (1874); Dr. Ox's Experiment (1874); A Winter Amid the Ice (1875); The Mysterious Island (1875); The Survivors of the "Chancellor" (1875); Michael Strogoff, the Courier of the Czar (1876); The Child of the Cavern (1877); Hector Servadac, or the Career of a Comet (1877); Dick Sands, the Boy Captain (1878); Le Rayon Vert (1882); Kera-ban-le-teta (1883); L?Etoile du Sud (1884) ; Le Plays de Diamants (1884); Le Chemin de France (1887); Deux Ans de Vaccances (1888); Famille Sans Nom (1889); Caesar Cascabel (1890); Mathias Sautlorf (1890); Nord Contre Sud (1890); The Purchase of the North Pole (1890); Claudius Bombamac (1892); A Castle in the Carpathians (1892). Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Why does Robur bring them aboard? I think because he's kind of a jerk. Robur is basically Nemo without a motivation: whereas Nemo wants the world to leave him alone because it's hurt him so much, yet his morals still require him to save those in distress, meaning he'll rescue people but leave them trapped, Robur just picks up some guys to show off... but won't let them leave. So how exactly is he planning on showing off? And unlike how Nemo's prisoners in Twenty Thousand Leagues are fascinated by what he has to show them, Robur's prisoners in Robur the Conqueror just complain a lot, yet don't really do much to escape. A novel about people seeing wondrous sights that they don't think are wondrous... well, it's not going to be very interesting is it? And once they do get away, they haven't learned a thing.
As for the sequel, Master of the World... well, the entire game is given away by knowing it's the sequel, since the mystery of the book is "Who owns the strange flying-machine-combination-car-combination-submarine-combination-boat?" But you the reader know it's Robur because otherwise the two books wouldn't be packaged together. Again, Robur seems to be flying around for no apparent reason, and eventually some guy catches him. And then Robur reenacts Nemo's fantastic end from Twenty Thousand Leagues, just in the air... only no one cares.
Read these books if you've ever imagined what Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea would be like if it was set in the air and everyone was dumb.