5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastic adventure!, 2 Oct 2011
This hugely ambitious project takes the reader behind Jules Verne's enigmatic, mysterious loner Captain Nemo (called Andre Nemo here). Anderson provides us with an exhilarating tale that spans a lifetime from childhood dreams and fantasies with friends Jules Verne (a masterstroke by Anderson) and Caroline Aronnax, to life on the high seas and adulthood.
The nineteenth century is an age of adventure, invention and wonder. The Victorians world was an exotic place to be explored and Nemo's story takes the reader right to the heart of it.
Anderson's Nemo is orphaned at an early age and takes to the seas travelling across the continents. Years pass and he is feared dead. Far from dead the intrepid Nemo discovers the lost city of Timbuktu, the hidden land at the centre of the earth, and is marooned on the uncharted mysterious island.
During his adventures he will face bloodthirsty pirates, prehistoric monsters, Arab slavers, and serves in the British cavalry against the Russians in the charge of the Light Brigade. Against all the odds he survives, becoming the captain of the futuristic state of the art vessel known as the Nautilus.
Anderson displays great imagination with a story that gives readers convincing characters with thrilling heart - pounding action. It is also about the loss of innocence. With the focus on the three childhood friends: Andre, Jules and Caroline it can also be read as a `rites-of-passage' novel with a heart wrenching romance thrown in.
What I really enjoyed was the ingenious idea of Verne and Nemo existing as true-life friends with the cautious Verne staying in France but living vicariously through his friend via his works of fiction. The story has Verne's quiet life juxtaposed with Nemo's life of adventure. The two friends are on two very different paths but both achieve great highs and lows through the course of their lives.
There is an excellent quote by Verne at the beginning of the book which neatly sums it all up: `What one man can imagine, another can achieve.'
That is very apt but the book is not just about flights of fancy. We learn more about the man and what made him. This reads at times like an entertaining and poignant fictional biography much like John Pearson did with Biggles years ago.
Anderson is a skilled storyteller and this is gripping stuff - it is quite clear why he is such a prolific and successful author and proves he is more than equal to the task of brining Verne's popular creation to life for a modern twenty first century audience. This is a story and premise that I am sure the French master of adventure and suspense would approve of. Fans of Verne will love the character references to his other works and non-initiates will enjoy a wonderfully entertaining adventure yarn.
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11 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
No Mo' Nemo, 25 Sep 2003
I think the thing that bothers me most about this novel is the novelist. Had Anderson actually read any of the Verne's work, he might have understood how patently ridiculous the idea of a novel based on the "real" Captain Nemo is.
Why? Well, "Nemo" is a pseudonym, for one. It comes from The Odyssey. When Odysseus blinds the Cyclops, the creature roars out a demand for the name of the man who has done this to him. The answer is "Nemo", or "No man", which is how Odysseus tricks the Cyclops into lying to his brethren. "Who did this to you?" they ask. "Nobody. Nobody did this to me."
So, Verne has his unnamed Captain adopt the name "Nemo" to show that he has separated from the world of men, and their greed and abuse. The idea that it is a true surname is absurd.
At the end of "The Mysterious Island", Verne reveals that Nemo is an expatriate Indian, which makes it even more unlikely that he would be around to befriend the boyhood version of Verne.
Of course, Verne could have made that bit up.
Tie it all to dull writing and a drab storyline and what you get is a dreary, dreary book that will make your blood boil with annoyance.
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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Enjoyable read, 15 Jan 2008
This review is from: Captain Nemo: The Fantastic History of a Dark Genius / K.J. Anderson. (Hardcover)
I found this to be an interesting take on the classic character from 20000 leagues under the sea.
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