Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Journey to the Centre of the Earth

Rate this book
‘Journey to the center of the Earth’ is a classic novel by Jules Verne (8th February 1828 – 24th March 1905). He was a French novelist, poet, and playwright. Firstly, this classic science fiction novel was published in French in 1864. Verne’s innovation was the concept of prehistoric realm. Actually he developed a passion for travelling and adventure at an early age. He wrote a series of best-selling adventure novels. ‘Twenty thousand leagues under the Seas’, ‘Around the world in Eighty days’. It also includes– ‘Journey to center of the earth’, ‘From the earth to the moon’, ‘The mysterious island’, ‘Off on a comet’. Verne has put his best efforts for this novel’s distinction, based on well-researched victorian science. The journey begins in Hamburg, Germany, where Axel lives with his uncle. Its main theme is perseverance toward a larger goal, and the power of earth. The main character in the story revolves around Prof. Otto Lidenbrock, who believes there are volcanic tubes that reach to the center of the earth. So, he starts journey along with his nephew Axel and their guide Hans. On their way, there are many adventures and also many natural hazards. Many Hangers, including cave-ins, sub-polar tornadoes, an underground ocean, and interestingly imaginary prehistoric creatures. They get a code and start working on that. With their tireless efforts, they crack the codes and find a passage to the center of the earth via crater of Snaefells Jökull. They reach at the right crater, at the bottom of the crater they encounter with many dangers. Unfortunately they take a wrong turn where there is a scarcity of water. But their guide helps them by tapping into a stream of water. So, as such there are many interesting episodes during their journey. At one place they all get separated but due to acoustic phenomenon they reunite. Even they face a lightening storm also. As they are on raft. After spending so much of time their raft reverses its direction and rises inside a volcanic chimney that ultimately throws them into the open air. Though they all become unconscious. When they regain consciousness, they come to know that they have been ejected from a volcanic island located in Sicily. After this, they all (trio) return to Germany. Prof. Lidenbrock is welcomed as one of the great scientists of the day. To whom Axel married? And what happened to their guide, Hans? Everything will be revealed only after going through the complete novel. One of the best classic science fiction and adventure novel, full of innovations which will surely take everyone to the fantasy world.

283 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 1, 2011

118 people are currently reading
471 people want to read

About the author

Jules Verne

6,334 books12k followers
Novels of French writer Jules Gabriel Verne, considered the founder of modern science fiction, include Journey to the Center of the Earth (1864) and Around the World in Eighty Days (1873).

This author who pioneered the genre. People best know him for Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1870).

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."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jules_V...

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
188 (27%)
4 stars
234 (34%)
3 stars
201 (29%)
2 stars
49 (7%)
1 star
11 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 70 reviews
Profile Image for Leo ..
Author 14 books414 followers
March 7, 2018
I strongly recommend this book if you like reading the classics. Jules Verne is one of my favourite authors.🐯👍
Profile Image for Andy.
1,176 reviews223 followers
January 8, 2024
So much to love about this. It’s a geologist’s dream, so wonderfully researched and rich in scientific detail. And it’s one of the most amazing adventures ever written. It’s a 4.5* - only slight annoyance is the abject cowardice of the narrator. Yes I know it’s a device, but it was still annoying. Wonderful though. One of the classic adventure stories. My favourite Verne.
Profile Image for James Morpurgo.
433 reviews27 followers
September 1, 2022
First time reading Jules Verne, this was more accessible than I was expecting and was in general a good fun adventure.

The science and geological understanding at the time of writing is way off but wasn't too difficult to put that aside and just embrace the spirit of adventure.

Verne has been a bucket list author that I've been ashamed to have not read until now, I will certainly be reading some other works in the future....
Profile Image for James Haigh-Kenworthy.
68 reviews
July 24, 2022
I can appreciate Jules Verne being revered as a writer during his time, as one of the pioneers of the new sci-fi genre, and how groundbreaking this book actually was. Reading it now however, it's all a bit of a mess and nothing really happens. Read it if you're bored, but even then just pick something else.
Profile Image for Nathan.
435 reviews11 followers
October 23, 2022
I felt nostalgic looking at the book cover so I devoured the book in a single sitting.
I enjoyed this book, recalled the movie, recalled those days when I read the book the first time.

The Prof & Axel. xD

Re-reading these classics always make me happy!!!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for David.
395 reviews4 followers
March 7, 2023
My second reading of this “voyage extraordinaire.” I sought out the Baldick translation. No one has been more butchered in translation than poor Verne for some reason. I’ve compared passages in every English version, and despite needless inaccuracies and omissions I think this one is the most faithful. Beware of any new editions (or ebooks that can be updated) of the Baldick translation, since Penguin appears to be letting their hateful sensitivity readers graze on their backlist now.

Published in 1864, this novel seems like an outlier when you look at the cluster of fantastic adventures that sprouted decades later. The kind of tale Verne tells is so crowd-pleasing I’m surprised the imitations didn’t start immediately. But where did it come from? Were there any books like this before? I don’t mean science fiction. That’s not the main charm here and, for what it’s worth, from my hasty glance through his bio, it seems Verne considered his works “novels of science,” by which he meant a way to bring his interests in the field into the higher realm of art (his publisher had conceived of the Extraordinary Voyages series as a way to make learning more palatable for the readers of his family magazine). And indeed Verne is especially good at the poetry of being immured within walls five miles thick, buried deep under an ocean where at that moment ships may be tossing around in a storm, of the profound silence of this stony tomb. It’s funny that his best book (that I’ve read) concerns his least interesting topic: rocks.

I know some of Verne’s influences: Defoe, Hugo plays, Frankenstein possibly, ETA Hoffmann, Fennimore Cooper. I know he helped start the travel writing genre. But, as far as I know, none of these accounts for the particular armchair romance-quality of this book. Some of the traits I’m struggling to describe:

—The snug Old World opening scenes that make such a nice contrast to the wild journey to come.

—The cryptogram.

—The mountain peak whose shadow at a certain hour in the year points out the entrance to the center of the earth.

—The scientist-adventurers, with their instruments and pistols. There’s the eccentric professor, his lovesick nephew, who names a discovery after his girl back home, and their superhuman guide the silent Swede (who accepts his pay every Saturday, no matter what the outlandish conditions).





Even the little Italian boy whom they encounter at the end, after washing back up to civilization, feels like a trope now recycled innumerable times.

After the introductory chapters, a good third of the book is basically a travelogue, researched by the author entirely from books. It’s mostly uneventful, yet with some striking details here and there about this impoverished time in Iceland’s history. However mundane, there’s nothing like the stiffness I found in Around the World in 80 Days, and the almost catatonic dryness of 20,000 Leagues… But then maybe I read terrible translations of those.
4 reviews
July 30, 2023
Not going to lie it was really boring.
Profile Image for Garrett Lyons.
47 reviews
June 11, 2024
While well written, I struggled to finish this book. Characters are extremely one-dimensional. The professor happens to know the answer to everything. The narrator hardly grows or changes. For a book about discovering dinosaurs in the centre of the earth, it sure is a bore.

I can't believe this book gave me nightmares for my entire life. It's not nearly as scary as childhood Garrett believed.
Profile Image for Manzil Koley.
28 reviews3 followers
November 30, 2025
This book has been my all-time favourite classic adventure. something that always makes me inspired. i have watched the movie and now i have re-read my own copy of the book i can never let go of the adventure this novel takes me to every time. This is one such story that always makes me alive, and this is one such book that i can re-read more than once.

The world that we live in is full of surprises, and one may never know what more it hides. If it were to be true, what if there is something more to it? After all, human civilisation itself is based on stories. Who knows what this world is hiding? The only requirement is for the adventurers crazy enough to embark on those journeys.
5 reviews
Read
December 7, 2017
The journey to the center of the earth is by Jules Verne and it's about a professor and his nephew axel buy an original icelandic manuscript and they find a code of some sort along with the name of the writer of the code named Arne Saknussemm. And then they figured out the code it says that Arne Saknussemm has found a passage to the center of the earth in iceland and so they pack up their stuff and head to iceland. When they arrive the find a guide named Hans Bjelke and travel over the icelandic gourd to the base of a volcano and they climb up to the top of the volcano and start climbing into the bowels of the earth coming apont many strange things such as and underground steam that hans taps into and they name it the hansbach as horon of saving them from dehydration. After going many miles following the hasback as they go, they find an underground world the underground world has a big deep ocean and giant mushrooms that are the size of trees and they find ancient bones of dinosaurs and they find a human skeleton whose measures up to be more than 12 feet tall and so they build a raft to get off of this island and across the under ground sea and then they sail for a couple of days and they go through a big storm and see a monster fight and then they finally see land but is he same island that they left but as they search the shore they find a passage with the name Arne Saknussemm carved on the wall but it looked as if it had been caved in so they take what's left of their gunpowder and blow ahole through the hole and go down into a hole and then get blown out by a volcano into a french town and then find help and get home the end. I would recommend this book to someone who like adventure and fictional books.

Profile Image for Rachel.
325 reviews10 followers
March 14, 2015
I enjoyed this much more than 20,000 leagues as there was much less description of sizes, lengths etc. and much more description of the actual journey. It is an explorer who finds an old manuscript relating to experiences had in Iceland which eventually led to the centre of the earth. He decides to follow this with his apprentice and it describes there actually journey and the things they see such as prehistoric monsters. This was written a long while before paradigm shifts such as tectonic theory so it was interesting to see what people actually thought the centre of the earth held. It did have some scientific comments attached to it relating to the journey and these simply added to the story. It is well described, uses vivid language and is easily accessible to everyone. It is a perfect adventure story.
16 reviews
Read
March 25, 2016
Jules Verne wrote many iconic classic adventure books but this one takes the cake. Journey to the Center of the Earth is a classic adventure story with mystery, romance and syfy. The big mystery is how to get there. Professor lindenbrock takes his nieces boyfriend as a partner and he is really infatuated with the niece during the journey. Will they are down there they get attacked by many nightmarish creatures and in conclusion this book is an inspiration to many people looking for an adventure.
Profile Image for Abhimanue Tom.
4 reviews
March 12, 2016
Jules Verne's journey to the centre of the Earth is a book with great adventure, it is written in absolute realism the book not only takes the characters but also the readers to this journey. It is a cult classic in the history of literature and Jules Verne is a legend in literature.This book is an adventure for a lifetime. when I finished the book I looked around to realize that i was in my home and not in the adventure with Professor Otto Lidenbrock and Axel. Cult Classic for a reason......................
Profile Image for Levi.
39 reviews12 followers
November 6, 2017
Journey to the Centre of the Earth isn't a book for everyone. The language in it is sometimes confusing and the story itself is sometimes boring. However, there are also very exciting and suspenseful parts where you feel like you are really there experiencing what all of the characters are going through. I would recommend Journey to the Centre of the Earth to anyone who likes reading classics, likes book that don't have a lot of action, or if you are just looking for a challenge.
Profile Image for Madelyn.
36 reviews
August 9, 2017
One of my favourite novels! Besides 20 000 Leagues Under the Sea, this was the one Jules Verne novel that made me fall in love with his tales of adventure. What I hate about fantasy is that it's usually totally unbelievable. But Verne somehow made his journey to seem quite real. It was a beautiful read.
Profile Image for Kirsty McCracken.
1,714 reviews18 followers
August 31, 2017
2.5*. It's dumbed down from the original so I don't love it as much, but it's a great way to visit the story for younger readers, for sure!
Profile Image for Fredrick Danysh.
6,844 reviews196 followers
April 24, 2018
The journey begins after Professor Lidenbock discovers an inscription describing an entrance to a tunnel that leads to the center of the Earth. He an his nephew find a prehistoric world.
Profile Image for Kalila.
44 reviews
May 13, 2024
3.5

This was a good book. I liked how fast paced and adventurous it was, encouraging themes like curiosity and showing where it can lead and what adventures can be in store for you as potential is everywhere. This book had a very fun aspect to it, showing the exciting adventures the characters were led on and how they braved their greatest challenges. This story also showed how doubt can be overridden through real life experiences that are to be valued forever. I think this book also made a point of showing how truly amazing the natural world is, because I do think that it is quite an underappreciated topic. Another thing I found interesting was seeing how these characters supported each other through the difficult parts of the journey they embarked upon, even coming and continuously trying to help their lost and ill friend. I also liked seeing the sacrifices made for the purpose of science, which currently ties in to the unit of unity we are learning about in the English curriculum at the moment and how humans are more inclined to do something when they feel as though their actions are contributing to a greater cause. Overall, I really liked this book and know that the past me would have too. This is definitely a good reason to start reading more adventure novels again, because I forgot how fun they are. I was also sick when reading this, so it was a perfectly fun, fast paced and inspiring novel to read through a short sitting period.
Profile Image for Alexa.
155 reviews4 followers
June 1, 2021
I read the 1871 translation that names the main characters as Professor Hardwigg and his nephew Henry 'Harry' Lawson, who appears as over-dramatic, fatalistic and constantly questioning and complaining. If he's not on the verge of dying in every chapter, he's complaining about hunger, thirst, cold, heat and pretty much everything else.

The story is compelling and brilliant, descriptively detailed of the antediluvian monsters and giants and fascinating in its telling, the journey itself keeps the reader hooked, then finally an ending that is just as devoid of detail and disappointing as 20,0o0 leagues was.! :( Jules Verne has the talent and ability to keep a reader hooked, right up until the penultimate chapter, when he then dumps you into deep disappointment, tinged with indignation and frustration that the ending is in no way as fascinating as the previous chapters.!

[spoiler]"[spoiler]
Profile Image for Freya Abbas.
Author 8 books16 followers
January 2, 2025
I thought the opening of this novel with the Arne Saknusemm manuscript was great. I love Axel’s voice as the narrator and I thought Professor Lidenbrock was a great character. I loved the way geology facts were woven into the story and at times the prose was beautifully written. However, the plot actually got boring at times even though it’s literally about an epic journey. There were a lot of dull moments. Also, we get nothing about the interiority of Hans as a character and I found that frustrating. I also would have liked to hear more about Grauben even though she was only a minor character.
Profile Image for Victoria Conway.
10 reviews
June 25, 2025
Rating :1.5

“It’s not what is upon this island, but what is underneath that interests me.”

Written in a diary sort of format. Not sure if it's the layout or that the book was written in a different century but the characters were extremely unlikeable.

The uncle was rude and the main character was spineless. More description and focus on the science of their surroundings took away the magic of what was actually happening.

The constant near death misses and the fact that they rode out the center of the earth on a volcano outbursts, puts this story firmly in my will not read again going to the charity shop pile.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Joe Pearce.
1 review
August 22, 2025
Feels longer than it is, but worth the read.

Although only 283 pages, the book feels much longer. There are incredible passages of descriptions, but unfortunately that is a detriment to the actual journey they are on sometimes. Sometimes whole chapters would only see the characters doing the smallest distance of their travels, but they were filled instead with expansive explanations and descriptions. This book is for the reader who likes to get lost and loves the idea of exploring, but also likes to have detailed explanations given to them throughout their journey. There may be dull moments throughout, but the sequences that follow are anything less than.
Profile Image for Jason Wilson.
765 reviews4 followers
November 16, 2022
Not quite to the centre, but a good way down! Verne's novel deals with human endurance as well as geology, fossils and anthropology in contrast to HG Well whose concerns are more political. But though he celebrates human ingenuity there is always a sobering caveat.....as in the breezy Around the World in 80 Days , and with the nihilism of 20,000 leagues under the sea, we feel our smallness and transience against the might and constancy of nature.

A nice freebie audible reading by Tim Curry.
Profile Image for Bethany.
61 reviews
October 22, 2025
For a science fiction story there was not much excitement. It took a third of the book for them to go underground at all. Any time something dangerous happened it was solved within a chapter or two, often by the main characters avoiding the problem rather than interacting with it. I have to admit geology is one of my least favorite sciences so all the rock descriptions and Latin names for things didn't help.
Profile Image for Sagarika.
13 reviews
August 24, 2025
Decided to read the book cause I remember loving the movie 'Journey to the Centre of the Earth' (2008) when I watched it many years back. Well the book having being written in the 1860's was quite different from the movie, both in vibe and cast. Apart from the scientific terms that both confused and fascinated me and some old words that were a bit hard to understand the book was a good read.
20 reviews
September 14, 2025
This was my first time reading this book, from the 1877 Malleson translation. I listened to this book previously, from a different translation that was not the Baldick or Malleson translation, and it was not that great. If you have a copy of either the Baldick or Malleson translation of this epic voyage, definitely enjoy and read this epic masterpiece!!!
Profile Image for James Lomax.
9 reviews
November 25, 2021
This book is a very fun adventure, the last fifth especially. The science has aged like a glass of fine milk, but the book needs a suspension of disbelief anyway, so who cares? Verne is a great author and the characters are really fun.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 70 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.