Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea (Version 3)


Lu par Michele Fry

(4.5 stars; 760 reviews)

Originally published 1870, this recording is from the English translation by Frederick P. Walter, published 1991, containing the unabridged text from the original French and offered up into the public domain. It is considered to be the very first science fiction novel ever written, the first novel about the undersea world, and is a classic science fiction novel by French writer Jules Verne published in 1870. It tells the story of Captain Nemo and his submarine Nautilus, as seen from the perspective of Professor Pierre Aronnax - Summary by Michele Fry (16 hr 46 min)

Chapitres

Introduction 12:01 Lu par Michele Fry
1-1. A Runaway Reef 17:03 Lu par Michele Fry
1-2. The Pros and Cons 13:52 Lu par Michele Fry
1-3. As Master Wishes 12:09 Lu par Michele Fry
1-4. Ned Land 16:10 Lu par Michele Fry
1-5. At Random! 15:01 Lu par Michele Fry
1-6. At Full Steam 18:16 Lu par Michele Fry
1-7. A Whale of Unknown Species 17:09 Lu par Michele Fry
1-8. "Mobilis in Mobili" 19:38 Lu par Michele Fry
1-9. The Tantrums of Ned Land 16:20 Lu par Michele Fry
1-10. The Man Of The Waters 21:04 Lu par Michele Fry
1-11. The Nautilus 19:43 Lu par Michele Fry
1-12. Everything through Electricity 16:44 Lu par Michele Fry
1-13. Some Figures 16:56 Lu par Michele Fry
1-14. The Black Current 27:48 Lu par Michele Fry
1-15. An Invitation in Writing 19:08 Lu par Michele Fry
1-16. Strolling the Plains 15:20 Lu par Michele Fry
1-17. An Underwater Forest 16:52 Lu par Michele Fry
1-18. Four Thousand Leagues Under the Pacific 20:39 Lu par Michele Fry
1-19. Vanikoro 25:00 Lu par Michele Fry
1-20. The Torres Strait 20:21 Lu par Michele Fry
1-21. Some Days Ashore 25:00 Lu par Michele Fry
1-22. The Lightning Bolts of Captain Nemo 24:49 Lu par Michele Fry
1-23. "Aegri Somnia" 20:39 Lu par Michele Fry
1-24. The Coral Realm 19:56 Lu par Michele Fry
2-1. The Indian Ocean 25:37 Lu par Michele Fry
2-2. A New Proposition from Captain Nemo 23:27 Lu par Michele Fry
2-3. A Pearl Worth Ten Million 28:11 Lu par Michele Fry
2-4. The Red Sea 30:26 Lu par Michele Fry
2-5. Arabian Tunnel 20:54 Lu par Michele Fry
2-6. The Greek Islands 25:32 Lu par Michele Fry
2-7. The Mediterranean in Forty–Eight Hours 25:07 Lu par Michele Fry
2-8. The Bay of Vigo 25:06 Lu par Michele Fry
2-9. A Lost Continent 26:08 Lu par Michele Fry
2-10. The Underwater Coalfields 26:28 Lu par Michele Fry
2-11. The Sargasso Sea 22:03 Lu par Michele Fry
2-12. Sperm Whales and Baleen Whales 24:54 Lu par Michele Fry
2-13. The Ice Bank 27:22 Lu par Michele Fry
2-14. The South Pole 32:27 Lu par Michele Fry
2-15. Accident or Incident? 17:34 Lu par Michele Fry
2-16. Shortage of Air 23:36 Lu par Michele Fry
2-17. From Cape Horn to the Amazon 23:18 Lu par Michele Fry
2-18. The Devilfish 23:41 Lu par Michele Fry
2-19. The Gulf Stream 24:58 Lu par Michele Fry
2-20. In Latitude 47° 24' and Longitude 17° 28' 19:49 Lu par Michele Fry
2-21. A Mass Execution 20:29 Lu par Michele Fry
2-22. The Last Words of Captain Nemo 17:23 Lu par Michele Fry
2-23. Conclusion 4:15 Lu par Michele Fry

Critiques

BRAVO MICHELE!!!!!


(5 stars)

This delightful and imaginative story is always a pleasure to read. Nevertheless, most will admit that its scientific information can become a bit tedious. Michele Fry, however, has negated this shortcoming; her voice and tempo are so pleasurable that I could not even dream of becoming bored. Michelr, thank you, thank you, thank you. I would listen to her reading the classified section of the newspaper.

Great novel and well read


(5 stars)

It was much better than I expected, I had seen the movie when I was young and was not impressed, but I wanted to give the novel a chance and it was very good. Well written and full of adventure and mystery. Some parts got a little dry and it full of not entirely necessary details. However if you're interested in ichthyology you will find this novel contains a lot of great information on it. Save for the outdated information Jules Verne had on the giant squid. But that's not his fault. The read did a very good job, she isn't my favorite but she had different voices for each character and was much better than some of the other versions on here. So nicely done and thank you

20 thousand leagues under the sea


(5 stars)

I truly appreciate the great job done by Michelle to this book to life for me. it was my faithful companion for my long commute that became for a while the best part of my day.

Loved this book!


(5 stars)

I work a night shift and love listening to this book over and over. I love the reader's characters and skills. Am I the only one who wanted them to keep going ???

I LOVE THIS book and narrator!


(5 stars)

One of the best book written by one of the best writers and read by some of the top narrators on Libravox!

Narrator can get annoying at times


(2.5 stars)

The weird voices the narrator does fit some of the characters is just plain annoying. She's great when she's talking normally though.

Fantastic!


(5 stars)

What a shame picfixer's first review of this book was so negative. To the contrary, Jules Verne is brilliant. His imagination is spectacular. The depth of his study in preparation for writing the book, on a totally foreign subject matter (the ocean and it's life) is astonishing. The book was written on the 1860's and published in 1870!! One must recall that the internet, GPS mapping, etc. we're not available at the time - for that matter the first automobile hadn't yet been patented (Karl Benz, 1886), and Thomas Edison was just out of his teens. The book is written as a first-person narrative. It's narrator and central character, Pierre Aronnax, is a scientist and professor of marine biology. The book is his personal journal of a fantastic adventure aboard the Nautilus. As one would expect of the character, Aronnax enthusiastically describes and catalogues the marine life he encounters along the way. It creates a totally unique experience for the fiction enthusiast. Verne's personal transmogrification into this marine biologist is amazing. As a diver I can tell you that his underwater descriptions, such as how light appears under the ocean, are spot-on! I must believe Verne went diving to achieve this. Apart from my comments above, the story of the submarine, it's creator and captain, it's crew and it's captives is powerful, compelling and in the end, heart-wrenching. Great credit is to be given to the reader. This is a complex work with a great deal of "professorial" language. Her cadence is perfect, her voice is pleasant and clear, her emotion believable. She does a great job of defining characters with different voices and accents (one character's voice, Conseil, I had difficulty getting used to, but his voice grew on me throughout the book and was very unique). She keeps the listener engaged. I heard no breathing, no unnatural pauses or breaks, no background noise...all-in-all, outstanding! I very much look forward to seeing more work from her in the future.

Enjoyable, but sometimes long winded.


(3.5 stars)

The adventures in this story are great. I don't enjoy the characters as much as Journey to the Center of the Earth but they are deeper. The story is broken up into a bunch of short adventures. When Verne isn't writing every description of every creature possible this story is quite engaging. The long winded explanations of animals can get tiresome. It does add to the story...but in a very brute force method. If you can get over that then it's a good book. A single narrator is great. That consistency is something every book on here should strive for. Michele Fry is well spoken and is placed at a medium to medium slow speed. I wasn't crazy about her accent but I'm aware that's my own preference so don't let that sway you. All in all this is a good recording (best on librivox) and a good story. Give it a try if you have 16 hours to kill and enjoy classic science fiction.