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The Meteor Hunt: The First English Translation of Verne's Original Manuscript (Bison Frontiers of Imagination)
 
 
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The Meteor Hunt: The First English Translation of Verne's Original Manuscript (Bison Frontiers of Imagination) [Paperback]

Jules Verne (Author), Frederick Paul Walter (Editor, Translator), Walter James Miller (Editor)
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Book Description

Bison Frontiers of Imagination October 1, 2006
The Meteor Hunt marks the first English translation from Jules Verne’s own text of his delightfully satirical and visionary novel. While other, questionable versions of the novel have appeared—mainly, a significantly altered text by Verne’s son Michel and translations of it—this edition showcases the original work as Verne wrote it.
 
The Meteor Hunt is the story of a meteor of pure gold careening toward the earth and generating competitive greed among amateur astronomers and chaos among nations obsessed with the trajectory of the great golden object. Set primarily in the United States and offering a humorous critique of the American way of life, The Meteor Hunt is finally given due critical treatment in the translators’ foreword, detailed annotations, and afterword, which clearly establish the historical, political, scientific, and literary context and importance of this long-obscured, genre-blending masterpiece in its true form.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Adult/High School–In his introductory essay, Jules Verne in America, Miller discusses the literary crimes of Michel Verne, son of Jules. It seems that after his father's death, the author's son transformed substantively all the works published posthumously under his father's byline. The idea that generations have not read Jules Verne's novels as he wrote them can be both appalling and exhilarating. Appalling because such a hoax affected such a large body of work by a well-known and loved author. But think of the new reading possibilities! Meteor Hunt is a small gem; just two thirds of the volume here is the novel. In a small town in Virginia, two amateur astronomers independently sight the same meteor. Their rivalry complicates the marriage plans of one's daughter to the other's nephew. Further and farther-reaching complications ensue when it is discovered that the meteor is coming to Earth and, more importantly, that it is composed of approximately 1,389,393 tons, or over $781 billion, worth of gold. Verne's mastery of writing and science fiction proves itself as this 1886 story feels fresh and contemporary 120 years later. The satirical comments on greed, both personal and national; marriage; and society can be recognized and appreciated by teen readers. This is a great introduction for anyone who hasn't yet read Verne and an incentive for everyone to find the new translations of his other works.–Dana Cobern-Kullman, Luther Burbank Middle School, Burbank, CA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

The "father of science fiction" thought he was writing snappy contemporary novels of travel by means that, while extraordinary, were extrapolated from the practical science of his time (on this, see William Butcher's myth-breaking Jules Verne, 2006). This 1901 confection, appearing in the first-ever translation from the author's manuscript, is typical. It's about two amateur astronomers in Virginia, whose rivalry over which of them first saw a new meteor derails the wedding of the nephew of one to the daughter of the other. The obligatory voyage occurs when the meteor, determined to be solid gold, prepares to fall to Earth on Greenland, travel to which was much harder then. Whole cruiseships full of sightseers determine to observe the arrival. With its stock comic and melodramatic characters, slangy dialogue, satiric jabs (knocking U.S. imperialism, Verne posits a 51-star flag), and supercilious authorial attitude, the yarn is easy to imagine as a Preston Sturges or Frank Capra movie, especially if the mildly archaic diction of this translation were retained. Darn good entertainment; excellently annotated, too. Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 232 pages
  • Publisher: Bison Books (October 1, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0803296347
  • ISBN-13: 978-0803296343
  • Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 5.4 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #665,182 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Gold in Verne's Meteor Finally Mined, March 8, 2008
By 
Brian Taves (Washington, DC United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Meteor Hunt: The First English Translation of Verne's Original Manuscript (Bison Frontiers of Imagination) (Paperback)


The Meteor Hunt, a translation of La Chasse au météore, is a work of the foremost literary importance, both within and outside its genre. This is one of the best Verne translations I have read (in over nearly forty years of reading Verne), filled with idioms vividly conveyed in a modern manner that reveals the experience of the team of noted Verne translators Frederick Paul Walter and Walter James Miller, the dean of American Verne translators. As the first critical English-language edition of an original version of Jules Verne's posthumously published novels, and as science fiction, The Meteor Hunt is one of the most significant publications of its type.

There are two major misconceptions about Verne's later works. First, that they demonstrated a slackening imagination and literary ability, and second that they reveal a distrust of science which is distinct from the optimistic tone of his earlier, more famous books. Verne's later books, without the editorial guidance (and censorship) of his mentor, publisher Pierre-Jules Hetzel, are more slender and tightly plotted, devoid of extraneous matter. Verne's focus is stronger, and The Meteor Hunt demonstrates this with its continual tracing of the meteor's human effects, with only minor subplots that enhance the primary narrative.

The Meteor Hunt is revelatory of Verne's view of the United States, the capstone of a series of stories using an American setting or persons. The tone is light, the characterizations memorable, full of sharp wit and delicate irony, with the whole perfectly plotted. The Meteor Hunt also displays a warm cynicism, gently chiding the amateur scientists, the American competitiveness they represent, and the greed first for glory, then for gold that is a basic element of human nature.

The tension mounts as the two astronomers, simultaneously discovering the meteor, become antagonists, spreading the conflict to their families, ultimately igniting the partisan press and leading to an international rivalry. With the realization that the meteor is composed of gold, and descending in its orbit around the Earth, their own feud over its ownership is reflected in larger terms against the backdrop of the possible global economic ramifications. Verne was aware that any meteor of gold would have melted in the atmosphere, given the low temperature at which gold becomes liquid, but scientific accuracy was not the purpose. As international conferences struggle to resolve the matter ineffectually, Verne carries his satire to a new level, with a global indictment of competing national interests over an extra-terrestrial object.

Previously, La Chasse au météore had only been available in translations from a version rewritten by Verne's son, Michel, variously entitled in English The Chase of the Golden Meteor (first published contemporaneously with the French edition in 1909) and The Hunt for the Meteor (published in 1965). The Meteor Hunt is unique among the original editions of the posthumous novels in that the reader can easily access a translation of the alternate text that Michel wrote: The Chase of the Golden Meteor was reprinted in 1998 by the very same press that is now publishing The Meteor Hunt, but without noting the issue of authorship (see my review under that title). From a literary standpoint, The Meteor Hunt is superior, especially for its translation and critical notes. Nonetheless, many readers, especially science fiction enthusiasts, will be curious to read the other edition. In this way the differences between the two texts may be explored and readers may decide for themselves on the respective merits of the two Vernes, father and son.

Michel makes his most substantial intervention in the novel by changing its genre from what might be most appropriately called speculative fiction into outright science fiction. While his father's forecasts were usually limited to what could be extrapolated from the known science of the day, Michel went considerably beyond these confining bounds of probability. While lacking the effortless simplicity of his father's expression, Michel deepens his father's themes, adding to the melodrama.

The Meteor Hunt is the first in a projected series of four Jules Verne books from the University of Nebraska Press that were previously translated only in the versions modified by Michel, using manuscripts that were discovered in the 1970s. The Meteor Hunt was translated from one of the seven posthumously published Verne novels that were guided into print by Michel. For many years, the Verne family argued that Michel's changes did not go beyond stylistic polishing, updating, or possible verbal instructions from father to son; indeed the two had already collaborated during the father's lifetime. Whatever the reason or motive, Michel altered all the works posthumously published under his father's name, in both minor and major ways, even originating two of the books himself. Subsequently, Michel carried forward his rewriting of his father's stories by adapting them to the screen as a movie producer. The story of Jules and Michel and their collaboration, both together and after the father's death, is a saga of science fiction authorship that is only beginning to be told, and The Meteor Hunt and the University of Nebraska Press series do much to bring it to light for readers.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
meteor hunt, golden meteor, shooting star, old housekeeper
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Dean Forsyth, Francis Gordon, Seth Stanfort, Miss Walker, Miss Loo, Stanley Hudelson, Morris Street, Miss Arcadia Walker, United States, Exeter Street, John Proth, Constitution Square, Elizabeth Street, Davis Strait, Baffin Bay, Jenny Hudelson, New World, Whaston Punch, Boston Observatory, Costa Rica, Whaston Evening News, Whaston Daily Standard, King Christian, North America, Arctic Circle
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