Clovis Dardentor: A New Translation
Jules Verne published Clovis Dardentor in 1896, and readers expecting another voyage extraordinaire will find themselves pleasantly disoriented. This is Verne in an unfamiliar mode: the satirist rather than the prophet, more interested in human folly than technological marvel. Set aboard a Mediterranean steamer, the novel trades his usual grand ambitions for something more intimate-a comedy of manners disguised as a travel adventure.
The narrative follows Jean Taconnat and Marcel Lornans, two young men seeking military commissions in Algeria, when they encounter Clovis Dardentor, a wealthy, childless businessman whose fortune presents an irresistible opportunity. Their scheme possesses a certain comic elegance: engineer a crisis, effect a heroic rescue, and trust that gratitude will transform into adoption or patronage. But Verne understands that the distance between intention and execution is where comedy lives, and he orchestrates their increasingly desperate improvisations with evident delight.
What distinguishes Clovis Dardentor from Verne's celebrated works isn't diminished ambition but redirected focus. Where Around the World in Eighty Days or Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea used adventure to explore technological possibility, this novel uses the journey to examine social aspiration and its discontents. Verne's dialogue carries real sophistication here, his observations about class mobility and manufactured identity cutting deeper than mere farce would suggest.
The Mediterranean crossing becomes a compressed social laboratory where French bourgeois pretensions collide with economic realities. Verne, himself a product of provincial ambition who made good in Paris, writes with the authority of someone who understood both the comedy and pathos of social climbing.
This edition preserves the novel's considerable wit while rendering it accessible to contemporary readers. For those who know Verne only through his famous adventures, Clovis Dardentor reveals an unexpected versatility-proof that his imagination could work just as effectively in miniature as in the vast scales that made his reputation.
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Jules Verne published Clovis Dardentor in 1896, and readers expecting another voyage extraordinaire will find themselves pleasantly disoriented. This is Verne in an unfamiliar mode: the satirist rather than the prophet, more interested in human folly than technological marvel. Set aboard a Mediterranean steamer, the novel trades his usual grand ambitions for something more intimate-a comedy of manners disguised as a travel adventure.
The narrative follows Jean Taconnat and Marcel Lornans, two young men seeking military commissions in Algeria, when they encounter Clovis Dardentor, a wealthy, childless businessman whose fortune presents an irresistible opportunity. Their scheme possesses a certain comic elegance: engineer a crisis, effect a heroic rescue, and trust that gratitude will transform into adoption or patronage. But Verne understands that the distance between intention and execution is where comedy lives, and he orchestrates their increasingly desperate improvisations with evident delight.
What distinguishes Clovis Dardentor from Verne's celebrated works isn't diminished ambition but redirected focus. Where Around the World in Eighty Days or Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea used adventure to explore technological possibility, this novel uses the journey to examine social aspiration and its discontents. Verne's dialogue carries real sophistication here, his observations about class mobility and manufactured identity cutting deeper than mere farce would suggest.
The Mediterranean crossing becomes a compressed social laboratory where French bourgeois pretensions collide with economic realities. Verne, himself a product of provincial ambition who made good in Paris, writes with the authority of someone who understood both the comedy and pathos of social climbing.
This edition preserves the novel's considerable wit while rendering it accessible to contemporary readers. For those who know Verne only through his famous adventures, Clovis Dardentor reveals an unexpected versatility-proof that his imagination could work just as effectively in miniature as in the vast scales that made his reputation.
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