The Lost World (Arthur Conan Doyle)

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Title The Lost World

Cover of the first edition of The Lost World
Author Arthur Conan Doyle
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Series Professor Challenger
Genre(s) Science fiction novel
Publisher Hodder & Stoughton
Released 1912
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 320
ISBN NA
Followed by The Poison Belt

The Lost World is a 1912 novel by Arthur Conan Doyle concerning an expedition to a plateau (native name is Tepuyes) in South America (Venezuela) where prehistoric animals (dinosaurs and other extinct creatures) still survive. The character of Professor Challenger was introduced in this book. Interestingly, for a seminal work of dinosaur-related fiction, the reptiles only occupy a small portion of the narrative. Much more time is devoted to a war between early human hominids and a vicious tribe of ape-like creatures.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Ed Malone, a reporter for the London Gazette, goes to his news editor, McArdle, to get a dangerous and adventurous mission (to impress the woman he loves so she will marry him), so McArdle sends Malone to interview Professor Challenger, a notable task as Challenger has assaulted some four or five other journalists who have come to speak with him and find out if he is a fraud. On this visit, once Malone has secured Challenger's confidence, Challenger reveals his discovery of dinosaurs in South America (to be more precise in Venezuela). The discovery has been thus far ridiculed by the mainstream, but Challenger, after also assaulting Malone, convinces him of its veracity and invites him on an expedition to the Amazon to gather more evidence. Two other characters are also invited, Professor Summerlee, another scientist qualified to examine any evidence, and Lord John Roxton, an adventurer who knows the Amazon and several years previous to the action in the book helped end slavery by rubber barons in South America. They reach the plateau with the aid of Indian guides, who are superstitiously scared of the area, and trickle away by the time the expedition reaches its goal, with the exception of two Indians. One of these Indians (actually mestizos), Gomez, is the brother of a man that Roxton killed when he was fighting slavery the last time he was in South America. When the expedition manages to get onto the plateau Gomez traps them there by destroying their bridge. The other Indian, Zambo, is loyal and remains at the base of the plateau to help his employers if they can get back down.

Deciding to investigate the lost world, they are attacked by pterodactyls at a swamp, and Roxton finds some blue clay to which he takes a great degree of interest. After exploring the terrain and having a few misadventures in which the expedition nearly misses being killed by dinosaurs, they discover that there are also two humanoid species living on the plateau. One is a race of ape-like creatures, and the other is a tribe of actual humans. It is theorized by the two scientists that it was easier in the past to get onto the plateau, which explains why the post-Jurassic species are there. At any rate, the two species are constantly fighting each other, and Challenger and Summerlee are captured by the ape-men. Roxton and Malone, when they realise this, go out to find and rescue the professors, and find them just in time to keep the ape-men from pushing them off the side of the plateau, a fall which would be fatal. They then flee the ape-men and join up with the human tribe. Under their leadership, the tribe defeats the ape-men and achieves superiority over the plateau.

The expedition then discovers that the caves which the tribe lives in have tunnels leading off the plateau, unbeknownst to the human tribe. The expedition must sneak out, as the tribe wishes them to remain. They return to England and bring with them a Pterodactyl, which promptly escapes when showcased and is dismissed as some sort of bird by the public, as no one gets a good look at it. When Malone has dinner with the other expedition members at Roxton's apartment, Roxton shows them the blue clay, which, when cut open, is revealed to contain diamonds. Their estimated worth is £200,000, and they split the money among themselves. Challenger says he will use his share to open a museum, Summerlee to retire, Roxton to have another expedition back to the lost world, and Malone (having returned to England to find the woman he loves already married) to join Roxton in his planned return to the plateau.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Characters in The Lost World

  • Professor Challenger
  • Ed Malone – reporter
  • McArdle – Ed's editor
  • Professor Summerlee – scientist
  • Lord John Roxton – adventurer
  • Gomez – brother to a slave master Roxton killed
  • Zambo – South American Black guide
  • Gladys Hungerton – Ed Malone's love interest
The cover of a later printing of the Arthur Conan Doyle novel The Lost World.
The cover of a later printing of the Arthur Conan Doyle novel The Lost World.

[edit] Bestiary

[edit] Allusions/references from other works

In 1915, the Russian scientist Vladimir Obruchev produced his own version of the "lost world" theme in the novel Plutonia, which places the dinosaurs and other Jurassic species in the underground area of Russian Siberia.

Author Greg Bear set his novel Dinosaur Summer 1998 in Doyle's Lost World.

A 1994 release for the Forgotten Futures role-playing game was based on and includes the full text of the Professor Challenger novels and stories.

Doyle's title was reused by Michael Crichton in his 1995 novel The Lost World, a sequel to Jurassic Park. (Its film adaptation, The Lost World: Jurassic Park, followed suit.) At least two similarly named TV shows, Land of the Lost and Lost, nod to this source material.

[edit] Allusions/references to actual history, geography and current science

The characters of Ed Malone and Lord John Roxton are said to have been inspired by the journalist E. D. Morel and the diplomat Roger Casement, leaders of the Congo Free State reform campaign, that Conan Doyle supported. The setting of the adventure is believed to have been inspired by Doyle's hearing reports of expeditions to Monte Roraima.

[edit] Film, TV or theatrical adaptations

The novel has been adapted to film many times, the first time in 1925, with screen legend Wallace Beery as Professor Challenger. This version was directed by Harry O. Hoyt and featured pioneering stop motion special effects by Willis O'Brien (an invaluable warmup for his work on the original King Kong directed by Merian C. Cooper). This version has been deemed "culturally significant" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry.

During the early 1940's there was also a radio drama of The Lost World, written by John Dickson Carr and serialised by the BBC. Alien Voices also did an "radio drama" of The Lost World for audio cassette. Voice actors included Leonard Nimoy.

The novel was also adapted to film in 1960, 1992 and 1998. A sequel to the 1992 film, Return to the Lost World, was also released that year. The novel also inspired a 2001 television mini-series, starring Bob Hoskins and Peter Falk, and a television series that ran for three seasons from 1999.

A 1999 television movie based on Journey to the Center of the Earth contained several aspects from The Lost World; a war between a tribe of primitive humans and a tribe of "missing links". However, the "missing links" in this adaptation were not ape-men, but rather reptilian humanoids, called "Soroids" by the human tribe.

In 2005 a direct-to-video Leigh Scott film was released by The Asylum Home Entertainment. Called King of the Lost World it stars Bruce Boxleitner, Jeff Denton, Rhett Giles, and Steve Railsback. It was written by David Michael Latt and Carlos de los Rios and it is billed as a "modern retelling of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's fantasy action-adventure classic" which is itself described as "the epic story that inspired King Kong and Jurassic Park."

[edit] Trivia

  • The book has several scientific inaccuracies. For example, the Allosaurus that attacks the camp is described as being as large as a horse, whereas in life Allosaurus was much bigger. Inaccurate size measurements are also given to the Iguanodon and Phorusrhacos.

[edit] See also

The Lost World (1925 film)

[edit] External links

  • The Lost World is the most comprehensive site dedicated to the Gran Sabana region of Venezuela and Monte Roraima where The Lost World is set