The Lost World
Material type:
- 9780141031293
- YL/F/DOY
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo | F/DOY |
Available
Order online |
CA00011823 | ||||
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Kandy Children's Area | Book Wizard Challenge 2020 | YL/F/DOY | Checked out | 22/04/2025 | YB132575 |
Total holds: 0
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
A land before time - a journey beyond belief . . .
Unlucky in love, but desperate to prove himself in an adventure, journalist Ed Malone is sent to test the infamous and hot-tempered Professor Challenger on his bizarre South American expedition findings - not least his sketches of a strange plateau and the monstrous creatures that appear to live there.
But rather than being angry at his questions, Challenger invites him along on his next field trip. Malone is delighted- until it becomes clear that the Professor was telling the truth about the terrible lost world he has discovered.Will they all survive the terrifying creatures on the island? And will anyone ever believe what they saw there?
£7.99
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Reviews provided by Syndetics
Booklist Review
This tale, like everything else Conan Doyle wrote that wasn't about Sherlock Holmes, has been overshadowed by the man in the deerstalker hat. But now, with the Jurassic Park franchise reborn in Costa Rica as Jurassic World, some wily editor got the idea to reissue Conan Doyle's early-twentieth-century take on dinosaurs run amok. Time has been kind to the old warhorse; it's still a helluva yarn, told by a terrified young reporter tagging along on a South American exploration led by one Professor Challenger. Dinosaurs don't appear until page 106, and some of the action is given over to encounters with murderous ape-men, but, still, there are plenty of prehistoric reptiles rummaging about looking for dinner. The whole thing is a reminder of what a good writer Conan Doyle was. A pterodactyl nest is a crawling, flapping mass of obscene reptilian life. Oddly, the star of much of the action is not Challenger but rather his colleague Lord John Roxton, an old-style Englishman who believes every peril in life is a form of sport. Too bad he'll never have a Conan Doyle novel of his own.--Crinklaw, Don Copyright 2018 BooklistThere are no comments on this title.
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Other editions of this work
No cover image available | The Lost World ©1994 |