- Around the World in Eighty Days
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Verne, Jules
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Around the World in Eighty Days (French: Le tour du monde en quatre-vingts jours) is a classic adventure novel by the French writer Jules Verne, first published in 1873. In the story, Phileas Fogg of London and his newly-employed French valet Passepartout attempt to circumnavigate the world in 80 days on a £20,000 wager set by his friends at the Reform Club.
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- Chapters
- In Which Phileas Fogg and Passepartout Accept Each Other, the One as Master, the Other as Man
- In Which Passepartout Is Convinced That He Has at Last Found His Ideal
- In Which a Conversation Takes Place Which Seems Likely to Cost Phileas Fogg Dearly
- In Which Phileas Fogg Astounds Passepartout
- In Which a New Security Appears on the London Exchange
- In Which Fix, the Detective, Betrays a Very Natural Impatience
- Which Once More Demonstrates the Uselessness of Passports as Aids to Detectives
- In Which Passepartout Talks Rather More, Perhaps, than Is Prudent
- In Which the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean Prove Propitious to the Designs of Phileas Fogg
- In Which Passepartout Is Only Too Glad to Get off with the Loss of His Shoes
- In Which Phileas Fogg Buys a Curious Means of Conveyance at a Fabulous Price
- In Which Phileas Fogg and His Companions Venture across the Indian Forests, and What Follows
- In Which Passepartout Receives a New Proof That Fortune Favors the Brave
- In Which Phileas Fogg Descends the Whole Length of the Beautiful Valley of the Ganges without Ever Thinking of Seeing It
- In Which the Bag of Banknotes Disgorges Some Thousands of Pounds More
- In Which Fix Does Not Seem to Understand in the Least What is Said to Him
- Showing What Happened on the Voyage from Singapore to Hong Kong
- In Which Phileas Fogg, Passepartout and Fix Go Each about His Business
- In Which Passepartout Takes a Too Great Interest in His Master, and What Comes of It
- In Which Fix Comes Face to Face with Phileas Fogg
- In Which the Master of the Tankadere Runs Great Risk of Losing a Reward of Two Hundred Pounds
- In Which Passepartout Finds Out That, Even at the Antipodes, It Is Convenient to Have Some Money in One's Pocket
- In Which Passepartout's Nose Becomes Outrageously Long
- During Which Mr. Fogg and Party Cross the Pacific Ocean
- In Which a Slight Glimpse Is Had of San Francisco
- In Which Phileas Fogg and Party Travel by the Pacific Railroad
- In Which Passepartout Undergoes, at a Speed of Twenty Miles an Hour, a Course of Mormon History
- In Which Passepartout Does Not Succeed in Making Anybody Listen to Reason
- In Which Certain Incidents Are Narrated Which Are Only to Be Met with on American Railroads
- In Which Phileas Fogg Simply Does His Duty
- Fix the Detective Considerably Furthers the Interests of Phileas Fogg
- In Which Phileas Fogg Engages in a Direct Struggle with Bad Fortune
- In Which Phileas Fogg Shows Himself Equal to the Occasion
- In Which Phileas Fogg at Last Reaches London
- In Which Phileas Fogg Does Not Have to Repeat His Orders to Passepartout Twice
- In Which Phileas Fogg's Name Is Once More at a Premium on the Market
- In Which It Is Shown That Phileas Fogg Gained Nothing by His Tour around the World Except Happiness
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