Synopsis
A meteor of solid gold. Unlimited wealth falling from the sky. And a race that will corrupt everyone who enters it.When astronomers discover a meteor composed entirely of gold hurtling toward Earth, the world goes mad. The celestial object is worth hundreds of billions of dollars—enough to destabilize global economies, enough to trigger wars, enough to make whoever claims it the wealthiest entity on the planet.Jules Verne's novel was published posthumously in 1908, three years after his death, raising questions about how much represents his actual work versus completion or revision by his son Michel. The scientific premise is pure fantasy—solid gold meteors don't exist, and even if they did, they wouldn't behave as Verne describes. Yet this impossibility serves the satire: the golden meteor is symbolic device representing sudden unearned wealth, lottery-like windfalls, the destructive temptations that unlimited money creates.The satire targets greed, scientific rivalry, nationalism, and capitalism's corrosive effects on human relationships. Yet it remains disappointingly surface-level: broad characterization, predictable plotting, and resolution through technical trick rather than moral transformation or structural change. The characters don't develop, the systems that made the meteor's wealth dangerous remain unchanged, and fundamental questions about value and wealth are evaded.Still, the premise speaks to enduring concerns: resource competition, how sudden wealth corrupts, fantasies of getting rich without labor, and what happens when conventional value systems collapse. Modern readers will recognize patterns in cryptocurrency volatility, lottery winner trajectories, and conflicts over concentrated resources.From the author of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea—a satirical fable about greed and sudden wealth that resolves through technical salvation rather than human transformation.