I read this comic with my oldest son as a bedtime story. The truth is that we enjoy this adventure from start to finish. Many people think that reading comics is not enriching, but I think that it's one more way to tell good stories. The fact of having to read it aloud has allowed my son to have a unique experience that has allowed him to see, hear and imagine beyond what is embodied in the comic.
I thought this was the full length novel when I borrowed it from my library, turns out it's the graphic novel. Decided to read it anyways since it would be a good introduction and let me decide if I do want to read the original book.
I know this is aimed at a younger age demographic but I wish it had been longer and gone into much more detail. Maybe I will pick up the original text after all.
The adventure "Journey to the Center of the Earth",by Davis Miller is about they Adventurous. In the beginning of the book, they came to a mysterious house. As the book continues, they have gone through many difficulties. In the end of the book, just escaped from the mysterious and ancient house.
I liked the book because it was suspensful and had some mystory that are fun to try and solve and when you think you solved them it as a different thing.They give different points of view on what is happening and the details are great because they descripe it like if you where there and saw it.That is some parts of why I like that their are a little bit more but one thing that really didn't like was it was a little boring it took sometime to get to the point .
I enjoyed this book because it had a happy ending. In the middle of the book there were dangerous situations. They went on an adventure and found many things that the world didn’t know about. I liked that they kept going on the adventure and didn’t give up. I also really liked the uncle’s attitude in the book.
La versión que leí estaba en español. Evidentemente no se puede plasmar todo lo que tiene el libro de Verne pero los dibujos y lo hacen muy dinámico. Ideal para niños incluye actividades y un vocabulario.
Was not happy with this very short graphic novel. Needs to be much longer. There was more material at the beginning before the journey started then needed. I understand it's for a younger crowd but they didn't need to butcher it
This version of the novel is written for children. It holds true to the basic plot and can be read in one to two bedtime sittings. The pictures make up for some of the simplicity of the text, but overall, the words read like a very short summary of a novel, rather than a novel in itself.
A good bridge novel or introductory novel of the classic by Jules Verne. This could work well for readers 10-13 or beginning older readers. Not really my thing.
I haven't read the original (I've only seen the Wishbone episode), so I'm not sure how it matches up with the full story, but it seems like a decent retelling. Short enough kids will stay engaged.
Why read a huge novel when you can read a graphic novel adaptation for kids? For the details obviously. Occasionally you do find the details a bit much though and need just the highlights. This graphic adaptation by Stone Arch delivers that. You don't have all the pontificating of Otto Lidenbrock and only the sporadic whining of Axel Lidenbrock. You do get the fantastical expedition through a volcano and deep into the bowels of the earth though. You still get to see the fantastical prehistoric animals and the twelve-foot tall giant man herding mastodons. Finally you get to pop back up to the surface by riding a geyser of lava through another volcano. Jules Verne had quite the imagination and as modern readers we know most of this stuff could never happen and we know that Otto and Axel are idiots who were saved by Hans. However, it is a fun, fantastical voyage through the imagination and the lack of details actually works here.
While a nice little interpretation of a classic, this graphic novel strips Jules Vernes' tale down to a bare minimum. I read this book to review it for my school district, and approved it for library collections, but wasn't all that impressed. The art is suberb and it is very accessible to both reluctant and low-level readers, but it seemed to be lacking in depth. Reduced mostly to blatant action, the characters aren't all there anymore. Of course, all that being said, it was short and I didn't put it down until I was finished with it.
This is only the second graphic novel in this series that I've read, and I was really disappointed! A few pages in, I found a spelling mistake. "You're hearing is fine, nephew."
You're. YOU'RE!
I decided I'm not even going to bother adding this one to the library's collection. Instead, it'll just go in the cabinet with the other AR prize giveaway books. So disappointing!
From what I learned about the story in this graphic novel, I don't think that I would enjoy the full Jules Verne novel. Reading a graphic novel was about the only way I would familiarize myself with the story, so I'm glad that I did read it. I just can't say that I liked it very much.