SOLDES
Jusqu'à -70% sur une sélection d'articles*
A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder. by James De Mille
Par :Formats :
- Paiement en ligne :
- Livraison à domicile ou en point Mondial Relay estimée à partir du 5 aoûtCet article sera commandé chez un fournisseur et vous sera envoyé 21 jours après la date de votre commande.
- Retrait Click and Collect en magasin gratuit
- Livraison à domicile ou en point Mondial Relay estimée à partir du 5 août
- Réservation en ligne avec paiement en magasin :
- Indisponible pour réserver et payer en magasin
- Nombre de pages304
- PrésentationBroché
- Poids0.396 kg
- Dimensions14,8 cm × 21,0 cm × 1,7 cm
- ISBN979-10-431-4017-4
- EAN9791043140174
- Date de parution06/03/2026
- ÉditeurCulturea
Résumé
A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder is perhaps James De Mille's most popular book ; sadly, De Mille didn't get to see this novel grow in popularity, as it was first serialized posthumously, in Harper's Weekly. De Mille had written the novel before the "lost world" genre had become saturated, meaning many of the ideas were fresh and original for the time in which it was written. But, since he didn't succeed in publishing it during his lifetime, by the time the novel was made public other authors like H.
Rider Haggard had made the ideas and plot clichéd. The novel itself tells the tale of a shipwrecked sailor, Adam More, who passes through a mysterious underground passage into a hidden land deep in the Antarctic, kept warm by a hidden volcano. The land is populated by an ancient civilization whose views on life and wealth are the polar opposite of those held in British society of the time-they view death and poverty as the highest religious and social achievements.
As More adventures through the strange land, he encounters fantastic dinosaurs, lovelorn princesses, and the classic kind of adventure that foreshadows the pulp novels of the next century.
Rider Haggard had made the ideas and plot clichéd. The novel itself tells the tale of a shipwrecked sailor, Adam More, who passes through a mysterious underground passage into a hidden land deep in the Antarctic, kept warm by a hidden volcano. The land is populated by an ancient civilization whose views on life and wealth are the polar opposite of those held in British society of the time-they view death and poverty as the highest religious and social achievements.
As More adventures through the strange land, he encounters fantastic dinosaurs, lovelorn princesses, and the classic kind of adventure that foreshadows the pulp novels of the next century.


