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Paris in the twentieth century

Front Cover
62 Reviews
Random House, 1996 - Fiction - 222 pages
ediscovered novel, written by Jules Verne in 1863, is set in Paris in 1960. Money and technology have taken over society and the narrator, a young poet, is forced to work in a bank. Verne's vision of our mechanized time is prescient: there are fax machines, automobiles, computers, subways, and electronic musical instruments. Illustrations.

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A love story was begun, but never went anywhere. - Goodreads
And the plot is SO stupid. - Goodreads
I hate happy endings on dystopian novels. - Goodreads
The ending is also a bit of a disappointment. - Goodreads
The ending surprised me. - Goodreads
I can only concur with his judgment. - Goodreads

Review: Paris in the Twentieth Century

User Review  - Rachel - Goodreads

This is, by far, my favorite Verne book. He so strikingly predicts not only technology, but the shift in our academic system and values that I found myself stopping regularly to wonder if it was ... Read full review

Review: Paris in the Twentieth Century

User Review  - Nora - Goodreads

Very very interesting. The ending surprised me. Read full review

All 62 reviews »

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Contents

The Academic Credit Union
3
A Panorama of the Streets of Paris
16
Concerning Some NineteenthCentury
38
Copyright

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From other books

Predicting the future: from Jules Verne to Bill Gates

From Google Scholar

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Carl Abbott - 2007 - Journal of Planning Education and Research

About the author (1996)

Jules Verne (1828-1905) used a combination of scientific facts and his imagination to take readers on extraordinary imaginative journeys to fantastic places. In such books as " Around the World in Eighty Days, From the Earth to the Moon, " and " Journey to the Center of the Earth, " he predicted many technological advances of the twentieth century, including the invention of the automobile, telephone, and nuclear submarines, as well as atomic power and travel to the moon by rocket.

Brassai (born Gyula Halasz, 1899-1984) was a photographer, journalist, and author of photographic monographs and literary works, including "Letters to My Parents" and "Conversations with Picasso," both published by the University of Chicago Press.
Richard Howard, a professor at the School of the Arts at Columbia University, is an award-winning poet and translator. His translations include books by Gide, Cocteau, Giraudoux, De Beauvoir, Barthes, Cioran, and Proust, and Baudelaire's "Fleurs du Mal," for which he received the American Book Award.

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