In The Lost World, the first in a series of books to feature the bold Professor Challenger a character many critics consider one of the most finely drawn in science fiction Challenger and his party embark on an expedition to a remote Amazonian plateau where, as the good professor puts it, the ordinary laws of Nature are suspended and numerous prehistoric creatures and ape-men have survived. Just as Sherlock Holmes set the standard and in some sense established the formula for the detective story . . . , so too has The Lost World set the standard and the formula for fantasy-adventure stories . . . , Michael Crichton writes in his Introduction. The tone and techniques that Conan Doyle first refined in The Lost World have become standard narrative procedures in popular entertainment of the present day. `The ordinary laws of Nature are suspended. The various checks with influence the struggle for existence in the world at large are all neutralized or altered. Creatures survive which would otherwise disappear.' Headed by the larger than life figure of Professor Challenger, a scientific expedition sets out to explore a plateau in South America that remains frozen in time from the days when dinosaurs roamed the Earth. Seemingly impossible to penetrate, this lost word holds great danger for the four men, whether from fiendish ape-men or terrifying prehistoric creatures. Arthur Conan Doyle's classic tale of adventure and discovery still excites the reader today, just as dinosaurs continue to grip the popular imagination.
Naš sajt koristi kolačiće koji služe da poboljšaju vaše korisničko iskustvo, analiziraju posete sajtu i prikazuju adekvatne reklame odabranoj publici. Posetom ovog sajta, vi se slažete sa korišćenjem kolačiča u skladu sa našom Politkom korišćenja kolačiča .
Artikal nema komentare