Updated: May 27, 2024
Five Weeks in a Balloon, or, Journeys and Discoveries in Africa by Three Englishmen (French: Cinq
semaines en ballon) is an adventure novel by Jules Verne.
It is the first Verne novel in which he perfected the "ingredients" of his later work, skillfully
mixing a plot full of adventure and twists that hold the reader's interest with passages of
technical, geographic, and historic description. The book gives readers a glimpse of the exploration
of Africa, which was still not completely known to Europeans of the time, with explorers traveling
all over the continent in search of its secrets.
Public interest in fanciful tales of African exploration was at its height, and the book was an instant
hit; it made Verne financially independent and got him a contract with Jules Hetzel's publishing house,
which put out several dozen more works of his for over forty years afterward.
A scholar and explorer, Dr. Samuel Fergusson, accompanied by his manservant Joe and his friend professional
hunter Richard "Dick" Kennedy, sets out to travel across the African continent — still not fully explored — with
the help of a hot-air balloon filled with hydrogen. He has invented a mechanism that, by eliminating the need
to release gas or throw ballast overboard to control his altitude, allows very long trips to be taken. This
voyage is meant to link together the voyages of Sir Richard Burton and John Hanning Speke in East Africa with
those of Heinrich Barth in the regions of the Sahara and Chad. The trip begins in Zanzibar on the east coast,
and passes across Lake Victoria, Lake Chad, Agadez, Timbuktu, Djenné and Ségou to St Louis in modern day
Senegal on the west coast. The book describes the unknown interior of Africa near modern day Central African
Republic as a desert, when it is actually savanna.
Map of the trip described in the book from the east to the west coast of Africa. A good deal of the initial
exploration is to focus on the finding of the source of the Nile, an event that occurs in chapter 18 (out of 43).
The second leg is to link up the other explorers. There are numerous scenes of adventure, composed of either a
conflict with a native or a conflict with the environment. Some examples include: Rescuing of a missionary
from a tribe that was preparing to sacrifice him. Running out of water while stranded, windless, over the Sahara.
An attack on the balloon by condors, leading to a dramatic action as Joe leaps out of the balloon. The actions
taken to rescue Joe later. Narrowly escaping the remnants of a militant army as the balloon dwindles to nothingness
with the loss of hydrogen.
In all these adventures, the protagonists overcome by continued perseverance more than anything else. The novel is
filled with coincidental moments where trouble is avoided because wind catches up at just the right time, or the
characters look in just the right direction. There are frequent references to a higher power watching out for them,
as tidy an explanation as any.
The balloon itself ultimately fails before the end, but makes it far enough across to get the protagonists to friendly
lands, and eventually back to England, therefore succeeding in the expedition. The story abruptly ends after the
African trip, with only a brief synopsis of what follows.
- Five Weeks in a Baloon (1962) -
Directed by Irwin Allen Writing credits Irwin Allen
(screenplay) Charles Bennett
Red Buttons .... Donald O'Shay Fabian .... Jacques
Barbara Eden .... Susan Gale Cedric Hardwicke ....
Fergusson Peter Lorre .... Ahmed Richard Haydn .... Sir
Henry Vining Barbara Luna .... Makia Billy Gilbert ....
Sultan/Auctioneer Herbert Marshall .... The Prime
Minister Reginald Owen .... Consul Henry Daniell ....
Sheik Ageiba Mike Mazurki .... Slave Captain Alan
Caillou .... Inspector Ben Astar .... Myanga Raymond
Bailey .... Randolph
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