Paperblanks Notebook Jules Verne, Around the World – Mini (14×10 cm), lined
Compact notebook with gatefold cover, thread binding, pocket on cover and ribbon bookmark
Jules Verne (1828–1905) is the author of some of the world’s most famous books. This Paperblanks design features a page from Verne’s handwritten draft of his masterpiece Around the World in Eighty Days, with the novel’s frontispiece, illustrated by Alphonse de Neuville, shown on the back cover.
The most important facts about the notebook with wrap cover from Paperblanks at a glance:
Number of pages: 176
Format: Mini (14×10 cm)
Lineation: Lined, 19 lines per page
Material: 85 g/m² paper
Binding type: Smyth sewn
Einband: Hardcover wrap
Closure: No closure
Certification: FSC-certified text paper, acid-free sustainable forest paper
About the design Jules Verne, Around the World – Embellished Manuscripts Collection:
Original Art: Jules Verne’s handwritten draft of Around the World in Eighty Days
Era: Late 1800s
Region: France
French novelist, poet and playwright Jules Gabriel Verne (1828–1905) is the author of some of the world’s most famous adventure stories. Through his collaboration with publisher Pierre-Jules Hetzel, Verne created the Voyages extraordinaires – a popular series of novels which included Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and Around the World in Eighty Days. Today, these two works stand as pillars of the science fiction genre.
Jules Verne, who wrote his stories in his native French, has the distinction of being the second most translated author in history, right between William Shakespeare and Agatha Christie. It is perhaps due to the immense popularity and variety of translated interpretations that his work has sometimes been dismissed outside of Europe as “genre fiction” or children’s literature, interesting but light stories not worthy of serious discussion.
In the years since his death at the beginning of the 20th century, scholarly attitudes towards Verne’s work began to shift. This is in large part thanks to the Société Jules Verne, an academic organization dedicated to studying his work. Also, many of his early admirers (including George Sand and Théophile Gautier) went on to have their own celebrated careers, bringing a greater sense of respectability to his work.
Verne is now remembered as one of the “Fathers of Science Fiction,” standing alongside H.G. Wells and Hugo Gernsback. He is credited with being an inspiration for the steampunk genre, a movement championing science fiction based on 19th-century technology. Interestingly, Verne himself never aimed to be a scientific writer. Instead he sought to share the beauty of the real world, saying his goal was to “depict the earth [und] at the same time to realize a very high ideal of beauty of style.”
The classic brown “Verne, Around the World” design features Verne’s handwritten draft of Around the World in Eighty Days. The back of the journal features the novel’s frontispiece illustrated by Alphonse de Neuville.
Published in 1873, Around the World in Eighty Days is one of Verne’s most acclaimed works. The story of Phileas Fogg and his attempt to circumnavigate the globe inspired countless real-life adventurers to follow in his footsteps. We hope this journal will allow you to take your own writing and creativity anywhere, perhaps even on your own world tour. Because, as Ray Bradbury said, “We are all, in one way or another, the children of Jules Verne.”
Reviews
There are no reviews yet