Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon explained

Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon
Title Orig:La Jangada - Huit Cents lieues sur l'Amazone
Author:Jules Verne
Illustrator:Léon Benett
Country:France
Language:French
Series:The Extraordinary Voyages #21
Genre:Adventure novel
Publisher:Pierre-Jules Hetzel
Release Date:1881
English Release Date:1881
Media Type:Print (Hardback)
Preceded By:The Steam House
Followed By:Godfrey Morgan

Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon (French: La Jangada - Huit Cents lieues sur l'Amazone) is a novel by Jules Verne, published in 1881. It has also been published as The Giant Raft.[1]

It is an adventure novel, involving how Joam Garral, a ranch owner living near the Peruvian-Brazilian border on the Amazon River, is forced to travel downstream when his past catches up with him. Most of the novel is situated on a large jangada (a Brazilian timber raft) that is used by Garral and his family to float to Belém, at the river's mouth. Many aspects of the raft, scenery, and journey are described in detail.

It was adapted into the 1993 film Eight Hundred Leagues Down the Amazon.

Plot summary

Joam Garral grants his daughter's wish to travel to Belém, where she wants to marry Manuel Valdez in the presence of Manuel's invalid mother. The Garrals travel down the Amazon River using a giant timber raft. At Belém, Joam plans to restore his good name, as he is still wanted in Brazil for a crime he did not perpetrate. A scoundrel named Torres offers Joam absolute proof of Joam's innocence, but the price that Torres wants for this information is to marry Joam's daughter, which is inconceivable to Joam. The proof lies in an encrypted letter that will exonerate Garral. When Torres is killed, the Garral family must race to decode the letter before Joam is executed.

Notes and References

  1. Evans. Arthur B.. A Bibliography of Jules Verne’s English Translations. Science Fiction Studies. March 2005. XXXII. 1. 95. 105–141. 24 February 2013. 30 May 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190530223943/http://jv.gilead.org.il/evans/VerneTrans(biblio).html. dead.