
audiobook
by James B. (James Bradun) Alexander
THE Lunarian Professor AND His Remarkable Revelations Concerning the Earth, the Moon and Mars TOGETHER WITH An Account of the Cruise of the Sally Ann
PREFACE.
CHAPTER I. An Outing.
CHAPTER II. The Professor.
CHAPTER III. The Moon and Its People.
CHAPTER IV. Life In and On the Moon.
CHAPTER V. “Mundane Prognostication”—The Profile of Time.
CHAPTER VI. Confiscation of Lands.
CHAPTER VII. Women’s Rights.
CHAPTER VIII. Marriage and Divorce.
A curious traveler recounts a remarkable encounter from 1892 with a self‑styled Lunarian Professor, whose bold statements about life on the Moon and Mars seem to straddle the line between prophecy and scientific conjecture. The professor offers vivid descriptions of alien landscapes, predicts the growth of cities like Minneapolis, and even hints at technologies that feel startlingly modern. The narrator, aware of the era’s skepticism, presents the professor’s claims with a blend of respect and gentle doubt, inviting listeners to weigh imagination against emerging facts.
The story then shifts to a light‑hearted personal adventure: a leisurely outing that quickly turns comic when a tiny sunfish’s hook lands in the narrator’s nose, sending both boat and ego wobbling on the water. This humorous episode underscores the book’s tone—a mix of speculative wonder and everyday mishap—that keeps the listener anchored while the professor’s extraordinary revelations drift toward the unknown.
Full title
The Lunarian Professor and His Remarkable Revelations Concerning the Earth, the Moon and Mars Together with An Account of the Cruise of the Sally Ann Together with An Account of the Cruise of the Sally Ann
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (450K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by MFR and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2019-08-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1831–1914
A civil engineer by trade and an independent thinker by temperament, this early-20th-century writer left behind an unusual blend of speculative fiction and philosophical inquiry. His best-known book imagines a visitor from the Moon using fantasy and satire to reflect on life on Earth.
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