Propeller Island, Jules Verne
Propeller Island, Jules Verne
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Propeller Island

Author: Jules Verne

Narrator: AI Voice Charles Owen

Unabridged: 12 hr 42 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 06/30/2026


Synopsis

This audiobook is narrated by an AI Voice. Standard Island is a marvel: a constructed floating island, powered by enormous propellers, carrying a city of ten thousand across the Pacific in conditions of unprecedented luxury. Its residents — the wealthiest Americans, who have paid fortunes for the privilege — travel the world's most beautiful latitudes without ever being inconvenienced by them. They have parks and boulevards, perfect weather, and their own resident string quartet: four French musicians who missed their connecting ship and found themselves, somewhat to their bewilderment, guests of the richest floating community on earth.

Jules Verne published Propeller Island in 1895, and it is not the Verne of optimistic early adventure. It is the Verne of thirty years' accumulated observation of what science and capitalism were actually building together — a satirist's Verne, precise and cold-eyed, watching a society that has eliminated all friction discover that friction was the only thing holding it together. The island's two great families, the Tankerdons and the Coverleys, compete for supremacy with the focused energy of people who have never needed to cooperate with anyone, and their rivalry gradually splits the island — ideologically, politically, and finally physically — into two halves driving in opposite directions.

The ending is one of the most formally exact in Verne's work: a metaphor made literal, an argument completed as spectacle. A society built entirely on private competition finds, at the moment it most needs collective action, that it has no idea how to perform one.

Visionary, satirical, and more relevant than it has any right to be — one of the most underrated novels in the Voyages extraordinaires.

About Jules Verne

French author Jules Verne was born in the port of Nantes in 1828. He later moved to Paris to study law. At age twenty-eight, he married Honorine de Viane, a young widow with two children. Verne published several plays under the tutelage of Victor Hugo and Alexandre Dumas. He made his living as a stockbroker until his first successful series, Voyages Extraordinaire, was published in 1863. Soon Verne's novels became enormously popular around the world. Without a scientific background or experiences as a traveler, Verne spent much of his time doing research for his books. However, when the logic of the story contradicted scientific knowledge, Verne took poetic license with science to serve his fast-paced adventures.

Verne's stories caught the spirit of the nineteenth century and its uncritical enthusiasm about scientific progress and invention. His works were often written in the form of a travel book taking the readers on fantastic voyages. Many of Verne's ideas have been hailed as prophetic, predicting some of the inventions that have changed our world, including the airplane, the submarine, and spacecraft. He published sixty-five novels, some twenty short stories and essays, thirty plays, an opera libretto and two geographical works.

In the first part of his career Verne expressed optimism about progress and Europe's central role in the social and technical development of the world. In Verne's later novels, the author's pessimism is reflected in the doom-laden fin-de-siècle atmosphere. In contrast to the adventurous spirit of his novels, Verne's personal life was relatively uneventful, with the exception of his surviving a murder attempt by his insane nephew. Verne died of natural causes in Amiens on March 24, 1905.


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