Having assured the members of London's exclusive
Reform Club that he will circumnavigate the world in 80
days, Fogg - stiff, repressed, English - starts by
joining forces with an irrepressible Frenchman,
Passepartout, and then with a ravishing Indian beauty,
Aouda. Together they slice through jungles, over
snowbound passes, even across an entire isthmus - only
to get back five minutes late. Fogg faces despair and
suicide, but Aouda makes a new man of him, able to face
even the Reform Club again.
Around the World
in Eighty Days (1872) contains a strong dose of
post-Romantic reality plus extensive borrowing from the
author's own Journey to England and Scotland -
but not a shred of science fiction. Its modernism lies
instead in the experimental literary technique, with
parallel plots, a narrator constantly made to look
foolish, four characters in search of their own
unconscious, and a unique twisting of space and time.
Verne's classic, a bestseller for over a
century, has never appeared in a critical edition
before. William Butcher's stylish new translation moves
as fast and as brilliantly as Fogg's own journey.
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