Découvrez des millions d'e-books, de livres audio et bien plus encore avec un essai gratuit

Seulement $11.99/mois après la période d'essai. Annulez à tout moment.

Indisponible
Michel Strogoff
Indisponible
Michel Strogoff
Indisponible
Michel Strogoff
Livre électronique428 pages6 heures

Michel Strogoff

Évaluation : 4 sur 5 étoiles

4/5

()

Actuellement indisponible

Actuellement indisponible

À propos de ce livre électronique

Une édition de référence de Michel Strogoff de Jules Verne, spécialement conçue pour la lecture sur les supports numériques.

« – Sire, une nouvelle dépêche.

– D’où vient-elle ?

– De Tomsk.

– Le fil est coupé au-delà de cette ville ?

– Il est coupé depuis hier.

– D’heure en heure, général, fais passer un télégramme à Tomsk, et que l’on me tienne au courant.

– Oui, Sire, répondit le général Kissoff.

Ces paroles étaient échangées à deux heures du matin, au moment où la fête, donnée au Palais-Neuf, était dans toute sa magnificence. »

(Incipit.)
LangueFrançais
Date de sortie1 janv. 2012
ISBN9782806238375
Auteur

Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo (1802-1885) was a French poet and novelist. Born in Besançon, Hugo was the son of a general who served in the Napoleonic army. Raised on the move, Hugo was taken with his family from one outpost to the next, eventually setting with his mother in Paris in 1803. In 1823, he published his first novel, launching a career that would earn him a reputation as a leading figure of French Romanticism. His Gothic novel The Hunchback of Notre-Dame (1831) was a bestseller throughout Europe, inspiring the French government to restore the legendary cathedral to its former glory. During the reign of King Louis-Philippe, Hugo was elected to the National Assembly of the French Second Republic, where he spoke out against the death penalty and poverty while calling for public education and universal suffrage. Exiled during the rise of Napoleon III, Hugo lived in Guernsey from 1855 to 1870. During this time, he published his literary masterpiece Les Misérables (1862), a historical novel which has been adapted countless times for theater, film, and television. Towards the end of his life, he advocated for republicanism around Europe and across the globe, cementing his reputation as a defender of the people and earning a place at Paris’ Panthéon, where his remains were interred following his death from pneumonia. His final words, written on a note only days before his death, capture the depth of his belief in humanity: “To love is to act.”

Auteurs associés

Lié à Michel Strogoff

Livres électroniques liés

Fiction d'action et d'aventure pour vous

Voir plus

Articles associés

Avis sur Michel Strogoff

Évaluation : 3.8094170569506725 sur 5 étoiles
4/5

223 notations4 avis

Qu'avez-vous pensé ?

Appuyer pour évaluer

L'avis doit comporter au moins 10 mots

  • Évaluation : 3 sur 5 étoiles
    3/5
    It is the 19th century. Michael Strogoff is a courier for the Czar, and is tasked with bringing a letter to the Czar's brother in Siberia. This is a very long journey, and there is peril, as there have been uprisings along the way. Michael is travelling under a pseudonym. It was ok. I found sections more interesting that included the women characters in the book: Nadia, who Micheal meets part-way; she is also travelling to Siberia; and his mother, who he is supposed to avoid, so as not to reveal who he really is.
  • Évaluation : 4 sur 5 étoiles
    4/5
    This is rather a different Jules Verne novel from any others of his I have read, being set entirely within Russia and featuring mostly Russian characters (with the exception of an English and a French journalist who are there merely for comic relief). The title character is a courier for Tsar Alexander II (the Tsar who liberated the serfs in 1861), who must make a desperate journey into a Siberia which has been invaded by the Tartars, aided by a Russian traitor. While the novel starts a bit slowly, the second half is exciting with a number of dramatic and some quite shocking episodes. The ending felt a bit rushed and was as cliched as might be expected. Overall, a good read.
  • Évaluation : 3 sur 5 étoiles
    3/5
    What I like most about Verne's books is the way in which they may be read simultaneously as pure adventure fiction and as curious historical artifacts. The most famous examples of the second type are his science fictions works for both their astounding clairvoyance and fascinating misjudgments (like cities powered by compressed air), but in Michael Strogoff there is a perfect example of a different sort. Here we see a story whose setting is a giant stereotype. With the benefit of retrospect it's interesting to see Verne glorifying the Czarist state as one worthy of the protagonist's single-minded devotion, rather than as the brutal, regressive autocracy it is now well-known to have been. Verne's version of Imperial Russia is as a bulwark against a faceless horde of murderous, half-savage "Tartars". Again, with historical perspective a present-day reader almost can't help but envision this same story flipped to the alternate point of view, with the villains recast as a subjugated indigenous people struggling to regain self-determination from a distant overlord. Worth a read for its typically compelling Jules Vernian episodes as well as for its portrait of--not simply one man's, but an entire era's--ethnic prejudices.
  • Évaluation : 5 sur 5 étoiles
    5/5
    This was an amazing book by Jules Verne. Not only was I taken along for the wild ride across Russia with all of the things it had to offer, but the twist I did not see coming and it managed to propel me towards the climax of the story and imbue the ending with so much grandeur. This is a darker Verne book, yet one that will surely be remembered and that I felt had a very strong plot-line, characters, and descriptions. Overall, a great novel!4.5 stars!