Jules Verne: Difference between revisions
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:''Jules Verne is a [[human]] in the [[Hearts of Steel]] portion of the [[Generation 1]] [[continuity family]].'' | :''Jules Verne is a [[human]] in the [[Hearts of Steel]] portion of the [[Generation 1]] [[continuity family]].'' | ||
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==Fiction== | ==Fiction== | ||
===IDW ''[[Hearts of Steel]]'' continuity=== | ===IDW ''[[Hearts of Steel]]'' continuity=== | ||
While visiting [[San Francisco]] around the year 1867, Verne rode a chartered ferry with [[Mark Twain]] into the middle of San Francisco Bay to witness [[Tobias Muldoon]]'s new invention, a "sub-marine" named ''[[Vicuna]].'' However, a technical mishap plunged the ''Vicuna'' to the bottom of the bay, a misfortune that brought laughter from Verne, Twain, and the ferry's skipper. {{storylink|Hearts of Steel, | While visiting [[San Francisco]] around the year 1867, Verne rode a chartered ferry with [[Mark Twain]] into the middle of San Francisco Bay to witness [[Tobias Muldoon]]'s new invention, a "sub-marine" named ''[[S.S. Vicuna]].'' However, a technical mishap plunged the ''Vicuna'' to the bottom of the bay, a misfortune that brought laughter from Verne, Twain, and the ferry's skipper. {{storylink|Hearts of Steel, Part 1}} | ||
A few years later, Verne published ''Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.'' Coincidence? We think not. | A few years later, Verne published ''Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.'' Coincidence? We think not. | ||
Revision as of 02:55, 17 September 2007
- Jules Verne is a human in the Hearts of Steel portion of the Generation 1 continuity family.
Jules Verne (1828-1905) was a French author, and one of the fathers of the science fiction genre. His detailed, practical depictions of futuristic machinery are the roots of the technophilic strain of SF that eventually gave us Transformers.
Fiction
IDW Hearts of Steel continuity
While visiting San Francisco around the year 1867, Verne rode a chartered ferry with Mark Twain into the middle of San Francisco Bay to witness Tobias Muldoon's new invention, a "sub-marine" named S.S. Vicuna. However, a technical mishap plunged the Vicuna to the bottom of the bay, a misfortune that brought laughter from Verne, Twain, and the ferry's skipper. Hearts of Steel, Part 1
A few years later, Verne published Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. Coincidence? We think not.
In the real world, Jules Verne never visited San Francisco, and did not know Twain personally. Of course, the real world has no cool giant robots, either, so we'll take the fiction.


