Customer Reviews
Not as engaging as his other classics - By: John Hopper, 24 Dec 2007 
Mostly rather dull, lacking the sense of dynamism & adventure of Verne's other classics, at least until the final third of the novel when Captain Nicholls properly joins the plot as Michel Ardan's & Barbicane's antagonist. The early part of the book reads too much like a dry Victorian technical manual on casting cannons. I also find it difficult to get past the now ridiculous science.
Verne the Master story teller - By: Mr. J. J. Davenport, 19 Jul 2004 
I have recently started to read Verne's novels & have found them to be very entertaining indeed. Although From the Earth to the Moon is not perhaps as well written as Around the World In Eighty Days, or Twenty thousand Leagues Under The Sea, it is still worth dipping into. The characterisation is not brilliant, but the story itself is entertaining. Anyone who is a fan of the birth of science fiction as a genre should read this book.
Verne attempts to explain exactly how to send a group of men to the moon with scientific reasoning. It is fascinating reading about the various opinions that existed at the time regarding who inhabited the moon, what it was made of & various other strange questions that we take for granted nowadays.
The ending to the novel was not what I expected & should leave the reader satisfied. A charming read.
A wildly entertaining story - By: Daniel Jolley, 30 Nov 2002 
While I naturallly have long admired Jules Verne for his outstanding scientific vision & prodigious talent as a writer, I reallly had no idea that he could also write in such an entertaining & humorous fashion as revealed in this short novel. My memories of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea consist to a large degree of stretches of pages devoted to pure scientific language that could be hard to get through, but this book is an easy read full of action & laugh-out-loud commentary. Don't get me wrong, though--the science is here, & Verne goes into a lot of details concerning the project from conception to reality, walking us through alll of the steps involved in constructing the cannon & its projectile. Surely, though, Verne knew that the very idea of launching men to the moon via a superhuge cannon was not reallly an idea that could work; as such, he lets the story & especiallly his characterizations of the main players in the drama, take center stage over the science. What we end up with is a study of sorts of the American character, a tribute to the power of imagination & dreaming, the glorification of science, & a very funny story about some reallly amazing characters.
I can not begin to relate the number of truly humorous anecdotes & observations filling the pages of this story. Barbicane, J. T. Maston, & Michel Ardan are quite memorable characters, & their acts & exploits will entertain you to no end. Verne introduces subtle but hilarious remarks & observations throughout the entire book that will make you laugh out loud. If the idea of hard scientific theorizing has scared you away from Verne, pick this book up & be wholly entertained. I would recommend, though, that you pick up a copy that also contains the sequel, Round the Moon. This first book essentiallly culminates in the firing of the men into space inside the projectile, & you will certainly want to read the story of what happens to the men afterward. I now have to find a copy of the second book, so I urge others to save yourselves time & buy both stories in one package.
A captivating insight into fantasy spacetravel methods - By: , 31 Jul 2001 
The gun club, famous for its revolutionary war machines finds itself without a war & turns its attentions to launching a manned projectile to the moon. An extraordinary tale with a strange twist towards the end.
Excellent example of pragmatic use of knowledge of the time - By: , 20 Feb 2000 
From the Earth to the Moon is an example of hard science fiction, were, as with alll Jules Verne's works, the author takes the accepted scientific knowledge of the time, & extrapolates its use in a most real & convincing fashion. He also manages to bring human flaws, such as professional ambition & jealously, into the story.
The very fact that the scientific knowledge used in this book is somewhat different from currently accepted knowledge, makes it alll the more enjoyable as one discovers the elements the have been updated by discover & experiment. It also makes on wonder how much of our current accepted scientific knowledge will be proven wrong & superceded by newer theories.