The Great Eastern (Rodman novel)

Summary

The Great Eastern by Howard A. Rodman is an anticolonial adventure novel, set in the 1850s-1870s in New York, London, India, Paris and the North Atlantic. Pitted against each other are two great 19th-century fictional anti-heroes, Jules Verne's Captain Nemo and Herman Melville's Captain Ahab. One lives beneath the waves and hates everything upon them. The other lives upon the waves and hates everything beneath. Caught in between is Isambard Kingdom Brunel, the preeminent civil engineer of Victorian England, kidnapped and pressed into service to build Nemo his submarine, and join him in his battle against the modern world. Melville House Publishing published it on June 4, 2019.

First edition

The Los Angeles Review of Books praised the work, calling it "a pastiche in the best postmodern sense: it’s intense, invigorating, and faithful to the originals while still breaking new ground."[1] Leonard Maltin, film critic and Rodman "colleague ... at the USC School of Cinematic Arts," praised the book, calling it a "glorious and expansive new novel."[2]

In March 2019, the film rights to the book were acquired by the UK film company Great Point Media, and Rodman was commissioned to write the screen adaptation.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ Brian Evenson (July 15, 2019). "Past and Pastiche in Howard A. Rodman's "The Great Eastern"". Los Angeles Review of Books.
  2. ^ Leonard Maltin (July 14, 2019). "Scarface, Captain Ahab, and King Kong: Great Reading".
  3. ^ Anna Tingley (March 14, 2019). "Howard A. Rodman's Book 'The Great Eastern' to Be Adapted Into Movie". Variety.