One needn’t be a literary populist, jettisoning all critical values, to understand that especially when young we read certain books for the pure escapist bliss of it. In my case, before and during puberty, that meant fiction by Edgar Rice Burroughs, H.G. Wells and, best of all, Jules Verne. Putting aside the will to impose arbitrary genres on books, what these writers guaranteed this young reader was adventure. Around the same time I was first reading Defoe (Robinson Crusoe) and Swift (Gulliver’s Travels) for similar reasons. Boys, certainly, and, presumably, at least some girls, enjoy tales of adventure -- of survival, courage and resourcefulness. Kafka comes later.
A reader of Anecdotal Evidence, Thomas Parker, teaches fourth grade in Los Angeles and recently read Verne’s The Mysterious Island (L'Île mystérieuse, 1875). I remember my mother taking me to a matinee of the film version of the novel, with special effects by Ray Harryhausen and a score by Bernard Herrmann, in 1961. Naturally, I remember most vividly the giant crab scene. Around the same time I read the Classics Illustrated comicbook adaptation of the novel, and within a year or two the novel itself. Thomas’ review of Verne’s book, “A Boy Scout’s Handbook: The Mysterious Island,” is published on the Black Gate website and is one of the most entertaining things I’ve read online in a while.He writes with enthusiasm without a hint of sub-literary slumming:
“As for books, I recently
read something that would definitely make the real desert island cut — Jules
Verne’s The Mysterious Island. It’s a veritable Swiss army knife of a book,
full of useful hints and practical advice, whether you want to lower the level
of a lake, make nitroglycerin, cook a capybara or construct a seaworthy,
two-hundred-ton ship from scratch. It’s a book no Boy Scout should leave home
without.”
I had forgotten that the
novel and movie begin in the United States during the Civil War. That would
have been a further inducement to this young reader/viewer, as 1961 was the centenary
of the war’s beginning and I was obsessed with it. All the characters are
Americans, which I had also forgotten. Like Odysseus, the survivors, led by
Cyrus Smith, embody mêtis, what we would characterize as cunning
intelligence. They even construct a ship and christen it the Bonadventure.
(Edmund Blunden’s 1922 travel journal is titled Bonadventure, after
the ship he sailed on.) Thomas acknowledges (as every reader should, though
some will not) that The Mysterious Island was written 150 years ago and
its author may not have shared our enlightened moral values. Thomas’ conclusion is
worth quoting at length:
“[T]he thing that most
marks The Mysterious Island as an artifact from someplace far, far away
is an attitude and an assumption — every page shines with an optimism and
unalloyed faith in reason (and faith in faith, too — the colonists frequently
offer up thanks to their Creator) that have become increasingly alien in this
decidedly non-Vernian far future that we’ve wound up living in. When was the
last time you read a six-hundred-page book without a single cynical word in it?
“More than the complete
harmony and lack of conflict between the men (there are no personal problems on
Lincoln Island — all problems there are mechanical), more than the island being
presented as a delightful puzzle to solve or an enormous toy box to open, more
even than the total lack of the female sex (that not one of these supposedly
grown men sees as a problem or even notices!), it’s this fresh, optimistic view
of the world (call it naivete if you will) that marks The Mysterious Island
as fundamentally a boy’s book. That doesn’t mean it’s valueless, though, even
for non-adolescents.
“Verne’s sunny view of the
world and of our place in it may not be strictly realistic, but it is
undeniably pleasant, and even inspiring and possibly useful. We’re all
shipwrecked somewhere, aren’t we, and when you find yourself cold and wet and
shivering on the beach, you can curl up and cry and start dying of exposure or
starvation… or you can inventory what you’ve got in your pockets, survey the
landscape, and get to work. In fiction or in life, it’s not a bad philosophy,
and there are worse tools to have in your box than L’Île mystérieuse.
“So just ask yourself —
WWJVD? (What would Jules Verne do?) The sooner you get that telegraph built the
better.”
How pleasant to read an
account of a reviewer enjoying himself while reading a book. Some of us still
remember those days and don’t condescend to our younger selves.
