"HE HAS CALLED INTO EXISTENCE A MINE OF FABULOUS WEALTH, AND HAS PLACED IN IT A MYSTERIOUS BEING ENDOWED WITH SUPERHUMAN POWERS": JULES VERNE'S UNDERGROUND CITY, SCARCE FIRST AMERICAN ILLUSTRATED EDITION
VERNE, Jules. Underground City; or, The Child of the Cavern. Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, [1878]. Octavo, original brown pictorial cloth.
First American illustrated edition, a lovely copy in the original cloth. A scarce volume.
Adventure stories "constitute by far the largest quantity of Verne's literary output… The Voyages Extraordinaires [as Verne's novels are collectively known] had a dual aim—to teach science and geography through fictional travels and adventures" (Taves & Margot, Science Fiction Studies 24:3). "The unusually attractive front cover shows the supreme moment when old Silfax, standing with arms raised in a small boat in Loch Malcolm, calls Harfang the bird to ignite the explosive gas trapped under the cavern ceiling" (Taves & Michaluk, 158). This book's first publication in English was in the spring of 1877, in George Munro's "Seaside Library." The British authorized edition, The Child of the Cavern, illustrated, was issued later that year. The publication of this Porter & Coates edition is uncertain (Myers cites "[1878?]" while Taves & Michaluk state that it had to have been sometime before 1883); however, it is regarded as the first illustrated American edition, as Taves & Michaluk cite no other such American edition earlier than 1888 (also by Porter & Coates). While Porter & Coates published numerous later printings of Verne tales from the Osgood plates they bought, Underground City is the only Verne first edition that they published. Myers 10. Taves & Michaluk V017. Bookplate.
Rear inner paper hinge starting, binding sound; very slight rubbing to spine ends only, gilt bright—a lovely, about-fine copy.