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The Barsac Mission
1919 novel by Jules Verne / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Barsac Mission (French: L'Étonnante Aventure de la Mission Barsac) is a novel attributed to Jules Verne and written (with inspiration from two unfinished Verne manuscripts) by his son Michel Verne. First serialized in 1914, it was published in book form by Hachette in 1919.[1] An English adaptation by I. O. Evans was published in 1960 in two volumes, Into the Niger Bend and The City in the Sahara.[2] It includes a hidden city, called in English "Blackland", in the Sahara Desert.
Quick Facts Author, Original title ...
![]() Frontispiece by George Roux from French edition | |
Author | Jules Verne |
---|---|
Original title | L'Étonnante Aventure de la mission Barsac |
Translator | I. O. Evans |
Illustrator | George Roux |
Language | French |
Series | Voyages extraordinaires |
Genre | adventure; science fiction |
Set in | West Africa |
Published | 1919 (1919) (posthumously) |
Publication place | France |
Published in English | 1960 |
Preceded by | The Secret of Wilhelm Storitz |
Followed by | Paris in the Twentieth Century |
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Because of the interest of Jules Vernes in Esperanto,[3][4] the original draft, by himself, called "Voyage d'étude", contained references to the language.[5] When his son finished the work, he removed those references.