The appeal of a science fiction
Science fiction as the name implies deals with certain scientific facts which are woven into the fabric of fiction. If the novelist is careful in depicting scientific fact, the fiction becomes really interesting. It is not necessary that he must be thorough in his facts but if he can make one believe that the story is probable, then he has done a good job.
There have been several writers of such a kind of science fiction. They are Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, and others. “Around the World in Eighty Days” and “A Trip to the Moon” by Jules Verne is very popular for what he prophesied have become true. It does not take eighty days but eighty hours or even much less today to go around the world, so with his trip to the moon.
The launching site where Verne’s moon men landed on the Pacific was on their return. Only the fact that Verne’s men did not land on the moon though they went around that moon goes to proves that these writers have some knowledge of science.
The present moon trips have reviewed the interest in Verne. Many journals have praised the work of Jules Verne. It is a wonder how he could have been so correct in launching and getting back his moon men. The appeal is limited because it is merely of fictional value with a lot of imagination.
The emotional value is wanting. One shall agree with this remark when one reads Verne’s “Around the World in Eighty Days”. There is enough adventure and several scientific facts are utilized. All modes of transport known in those days are mentioned. Even the geographical fact that as one travels East time is advanced but once the “END” is reached they may not be any urge to take the book again unless there is a need for reviewing the fact.
The human element of romance does not a major part of such kinds of fiction. H.G. Wells has written some famous science fiction, the most famous of them being “The Time Machine”. “Frankenstein” is another science fiction and has so been notorious for its evil that “Frankenstein” has become almost an idiom for evil and cruelty.
It is, in short, the story of a doctor, (scientist?) who wanted to create a man of his own choice. He believed he has found the way for it. But a mistake committed by his assistant changes the course of the experiment. Instead of creating a superman, the experiment ends in the birth of the demon Frankenstein who revels in murderous aspects.
Finally, he tries to kill the scientist himself but the demon was burnt by people. It is a horror picture with a moral; it was a parody of science’s claims.
A similar story we see in Robert Louis Stevenson’s Dr. Jekull and Mr. Hyde. It may be taken as a big allegory where evil was allowed to grow to kill the good. Again this story has given the idiom “Dr. Jekyl” and “Mr. Hyde” into the English language. Whatever may be their merit, those stories or fictions are not ordinary men who cannot follow scientific implications.