De la terre à la lune, trajet direct en 97 heures 20 minutes by Jules Verne
Read "De la terre à la lune, trajet direct en 97 heures 20 minutes by Jules Verne" Online
This book is available in the public domain. Start reading the digital edition below.
START READING FULL BOOKBook Preview
A short preview of the book’s content is shown below to give you an idea of its style and themes.
Ever feel like your club needs a more exciting project? The members of the Baltimore Gun Club certainly did. After the American Civil War ends, these master cannon-makers find themselves with a lot of skill and nothing to blow up. Their president, the impulsive Impey Barbicane, proposes the ultimate challenge: build a cannon so powerful it can fire a projectile to the moon.
The Story
The book follows the club's insane plan from wild idea to global sensation. They calculate everything—the size of the cannon, the type of explosive, even the best launch site in Florida (sound familiar?). The world goes crazy betting on its success. But then, a French adventurer named Michel Ardan shows up and says, 'Why send an empty shell? Let's put people in it!' The mission changes overnight from a scientific experiment to a daring, and possibly suicidal, manned voyage. The rest of the story is a tense, funny, and wonderfully detailed countdown to launch day.
Why You Should Read It
What amazed me wasn't just the prediction of space travel, but the joyful spirit of the thing. Verne's characters aren't cold scientists; they're passionate, argumentative, and gloriously overconfident. You root for them even as you laugh at their hubris. Reading it today, you get this fantastic double vision: seeing both how much he got right (like the launch site and weightlessness) and the charming things he got wrong (like believing space would be cold but not a vacuum). It’s a celebration of human curiosity and the crazy ideas that start revolutions.
Final Verdict
Perfect for classic sci-fi fans, history nerds who enjoy 'what-if' scenarios, and anyone who likes a story where the real enemy isn't a villain, but a sheer lack of gravity. It's smart, it's funny, and it’s a powerful reminder that every great leap for mankind starts with someone saying, 'Hold my beer, I've got an idea.'
Legal analysis indicates this work is in the public domain. It is now common property for all to enjoy.
Mark Moore
8 months agoGreat read!
Kevin Thomas
5 months agoFinally found time to read this!
Brian Walker
1 year agoUsed this for my thesis, incredibly useful.
Sandra Scott
11 months agoBased on the summary, I decided to read it and it creates a vivid world that you simply do not want to leave. Absolutely essential reading.
Nancy Jackson
1 year agoFrom the very first page, the author's voice is distinct and makes complex topics easy to digest. Truly inspiring.