Reading Victorian fiction can be difficult without context - in some cases, an annotated version can work wonders. The best remains Martin Gardner's wonderful annotation of the Alice books and The Hunting of the Snark , but while the annotation of Jules Verne's moonshot tale lacks Gardner's light touch it still delivers plenty of useful background. I started devouring science fiction when I was around 11 and worked my way through both Verne and H. G. Wells alongside more contemporary books. I found Verne stodgy and slow compared with the dramatic power of War of the Worlds or the humour of The First Men in the Moon , but it was still interesting, and Walter James Miller's 1995 translation works better than the version I came across way back then. What I doubt pre-teen me picked up was the way Verne pokes fun at America where the book is set, though even then I was doubtful about the concept of sending men to the Moon in a projectile from a huge cannon. Surely, I though...
Geoffrey Cain is an award-winning author and correspondent who sits down with world leaders, tech founders, and dissidents. His book Samsung Rising was longlisted for the Financial Times and McKinsey Business Book of the Year, and The Perfect Police State was named NPR's Book of the Day. His work has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, Time, The Economist, and Wired and has been featured on CNN and Bloomberg TV. He also advises executives and government officials on innovation. His latest book is Steve Jobs in Exile . Why this book? For years I covered Apple, Samsung, Sony, and the rest, and the people who knew Steve kept telling me the same story. They said his middle chapter at NeXT was missing -- few people were really looking into it. Everyone knows the young founder and everyone knows about his triumphant return, when he saved Apple from bankruptcy. But during the part in between, he wasn't wandering aimlessly - he was in his crucible, t...