![]() ![]() I cross-post most of my reviews to my LibraryThing account. I review books and comics and sometimes films on Mondays and Wednesday, and also provide monthly lists of all the books I've read and purchased. ![]() I started this blog in November 2011 as a way of chronicling my reading (importing some, but not most, of the posts from an old LiveJournal). More fun to look at than to read, but then, Robida was more illustrator than novelist. Evans selected illustrations from every edition in order to get the best set possible. The text translated here is from the first French edition, but editor Arthur B. Sometimes long-winded (seriously, very long), but the real highlight is that Robida illustrated it himself, so you get to see his fun futurism brought to life in a lively fashion on page after page. There are also air-wars, but they seem more exciting than frightening. There's sky pirates and telephonic courtship and attempts at a fun revolution, but Nihilist bombings destroyed Russia so utterly there's neither Nihilists nor Russians anymore, and Italy has become a theme park for American tourists. It's a mix of utopianism and satire and deadly warnings- some things are awesome, other things less so (emancipated women are so un-feminine they even have harsh names!), and other things are just supposed to be funny (the president is an automaton, which I feel like is the nineteenth-century equivalent of Futurama's disembodied heads). ![]() This is one of those futuristic novels that doesn't have a story per se, but is more an exploration/travelogue of a fantastic future. ![]()
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