César Cascabel

César Cascabel is a novel written by Jules Verne in 1890. It is part of Voyages Extraordinaires series (The Extraordinary Voyages). It was published in English in two-volume form, with subtitles "The Show on Ice" and "The Travelling Circus".

Cesar Cascabel
AuthorJules Verne
Original titleCésar Cascabel
IllustratorGeorges Roux
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
SeriesThe Extraordinary Voyages #35
GenreAdventure novel
PublisherPierre-Jules Hetzel
Publication date
1890
Published in English
1890
Media typePrint (Hardback)
Preceded byThe Purchase of the North Pole 
Followed byMistress Branican 

Plot summary

The action starts in Sacramento in 1867. The Cascabels are a French family of circus artists who spent several years touring the United States and plan to return home. Their savings get stolen so the family cannot afford the ship ticket. Instead, César Cascabel decides to travel overland, via Alaska and Bering Straits, through Siberia and Central Russia with their horse-drawn carriage, the Belle-Roulotte (the Fair Rambler). They do not expect dangers to happen.

On their way, they rescue at the Alaskan border, with the help of native girl Kayette, a Russian political fugitive, count Narkine, whom they bring along so that he can see again his father in Russia. Count Narkine adopts Kayette as his daughter. In Sitka, the group witnesses the transfer of Alaska to the United States.

On their way from Port Clarence the travellers unfortunately end up on a floating iceberg that drifts to the Lyakhovsky Islands in Arctic Ocean. There they are captured by the natives. Other troubles, including political ones, occur but Cascabels manage to get through Ural to Perm and then, easily, to France.

An animated TV series inspired by the book was produced in 2001 in France.

gollark: I doubt they'll go entirely anarchoprimitivist since it actually *isn't* cool and good in the wild with no tools.
gollark: There are tons of saner voting systems than first past the post, but almost nowhere uses them, unfortunately.
gollark: Why? It can be turned on and off electronically.
gollark: Probably, people will complain but then proceed to use them anyway.
gollark: It's far too big to collapse in the near term without someone deliberately causing it.


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