Dick Sand is fifteen years old when catastrophe makes him captain of the whaling ship Pilgrim. The experienced crew is dead, killed pursuing their catch. What a wealthy widow and her young son, an entomologist obsessed with insects, five Black survivors from a recent shipwreck, and Negoro—the cook whose sabotage will doom them all.
Negoro alters the compass. Dick, navigating with skill but working from false data, believes he's steering toward South America. They're actually approaching the coast of Angola, where Negoro's confederates operate in the slave trade. When the Pilgrim runs aground, Dick's maritime crisis transforms into something far more a fight for survival in Portuguese West Africa, where human trafficking remains brutally operational and his passengers have become prey.
Jules Verne published Dick The Fifteen-Year-Old Captain in 1878 as an explicitly abolitionist novel, dedicating it "to the memory of the martyrs of liberty—black or white." His research was extensive, his moral outrage genuine, his depiction of slavery's machinery unflinching. Yet the novel also reveals the limitations of nineteenth-century anti-slavery thought—opposing the institution while maintaining assumptions about racial hierarchy that modern readers will find deeply troubling.
What emerges is one of Verne's most morally ambitious and historically complex a coming-of-age adventure about a boy forced into impossible responsibility, a villain who corrupts the very systems meant to ensure survival, and a landscape where humanitarian ideals collide with colonial reality.
This is Verne attempting something beyond pure adventure—and the result remains powerful, problematic, and essential for understanding how the nineteenth century struggled with questions of slavery, freedom, and human dignity that we haven't finished answering.
Verne wrote about space, air, and underwater travel before people invented navigable aircraft and practical submarines and devised any means of spacecraft. He ranks behind Dame Agatha Mary Clarissa Christie as the second most translated author of all time. People made his prominent films. People often refer to Verne alongside Herbert George Wells as the "father of science fiction."