Journey to Venus

Journey to Venus the Primeval World; Its Wonderful Creations and Gigantic Monsters is an 1895 science fiction novel written by Gustavus W. Pope.[1] The book was a sequel to Pope's novel of the previous year, Journey to Mars. The Venus volume features the same hero and heroine, Lt. Frederick Hamilton, USN, and his love interest the Martian princess Suhlamia. They travel to Venus on a Martian "ethervolt" spacecraft.[2][3]

Journey to Venus
AuthorGustavus W. Pope
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
Adventure novel
PublisherArena Publishing Co.
Publication date
1895
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Pages499 pp.
Preceded byJourney to Mars 

The publisher promoted the book as "full of exciting adventures, hairbreadth escapes, and perilous vicissitudes, among primeval monsters and semi-human creatures, the episodes following each other in such breathless succession that the interest of the reader never flags."[4]

Modern critics have noted the book largely for its depiction of giant dinosaur-like Venusian beasts. Pope's pair of novels on Mars and Venus (volumes in a projected Romances of the Planets series that the author never continued) were precursors of popular planetary adventure novels of the twentieth century by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Otis Adelbert Kline, and other writers.

The original edition of Journey to Venus from Arena Publishing Co. featured sixteen illustrations by "Miss Fairfax and Mrs. McAuley." The ensuing "paper-covered" edition reduced the illustrations to three. After the 1896 bankruptcy of Arena Publishing, Journey to Venus was reprinted in 1897 by the New York firm F. T. Neely, with the reduced number of three illustrations.

References

  1. Gustavus W. Pope, Journey to Venus the Primeval World; Its Wonderful Creations and Gigantic Monsters, Boston, Arena Publishing Co., 1895.
  2. Peter Nicholls, The Science Fiction Encyclopedia, New York, Doubleday, 1979; p. 470.
  3. Jess Nevins, The Encyclopedia of Fantastic Victoriana, Austin, TX, Monkeybrain, 2005; p. 395.
  4. B. O. Flower, ed., The Arena, Vol. 14 No. 3 (1895).


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