A sample of reviews and mentions from various publications, websites, and reader mail. Comments can be sent to: info@rohpress.com
                 
From Classics for Pleasure, Michael Dirda, Harcourt 2007
Verne always makes sure that his “marvellous journeys” are always, no matter how technical, didactic, or humorous, tales of wonder and adventure. Mathias Sandorf – appropriately dedicated to the memory of Alexandre Dumas – offers a Vernian take on the immortal revenge saga The Count of Monte Cristo. In A Journey to the Centre of the Earth, three men climb down through a chimney of a volcano to discover another world underground. Like such swashbuckling authors as C.S. Forester, Rafael Sabatini, and George MacDonald Fraser, Verne seldom lets up on the excitement.
To read Jules Verne when one is young is one of the great treats of childhood. To read Jules Verne later in life is to discover a writer just as satisfying but even richer, one who is not only a natural storyteller but also a mythmaker, a social critic and an innovative artist. In France, Verne is now studied seriously as an innovative literary figure and thanks to fresh accurate English translations more and more of his work is available to American readers in reliable texts.
   
From Library Journal, Classic Returns, Michael Rogers, December 2007
Verne, Jules. Lighthouse at the End of the World. Univ. of Nebraska. 2007. and Mathias Sandorf. ROH. 2007.

Written in 1905 and 1885, respectively, these are tales of survival and revenge. In Lighthouse, Vasquez, keeper of a lighthouse at the bottom of South America, is forced to flee a band of cutthroats and must regain the light while surviving in the wilderness. Sandorf is the story of Dr. Antekirtt, a dry-docked Captain Nemo and master of an island fortress full of advanced weaponry.

A reviewer, a fan of historical fiction, Barnes and Noble 11/04/2007
Inspirational! A great book about one man who seeks justice after being betrayed and how he lives his life up until judgement. A sad story with a family and friend death you will be inspired.
L Taylor, a reader from Australia
I got my copy of Mathias Sandorf and I read it immediately. Its found it full of action and the visits of places around the Mediterranean. There is a twist in the identity of one of the characters. I enjoyed it like most of Jules Verne books I've read. Overall A GOOD READ!
The Sandokan Series
Excerpt from article posted by writer Elijah Kinch Spector at http://abouttocharge.wordpress.com/
So, in my many searches for the best in historical, swashbuckler-type adventure fiction, I have more than once stumbled across the name of Emilio Salgari–usually mentioned by native Italian-speakers who lament that they cannot share his greatness with their English-speaking friends. Having now read the first book, Sandokan: The Tigers of Mompracem, I must say that I can see what all the fuss is about, but I would have seen it all even better had I been able to read the book when I was about thirteen. The story of an entirely vicious, hate-filled, revenge-obsessed pirate who suddenly (very, very suddenly) falls in love, causing everything to change for him, is full of the kind of melodrama, and spurts of blood, that I would have loved at that age.
 
         
Excerpt from review posted by Prof. Georges Dodds at SFsite.com
Ah... finally some books to keep me up reading until 3 a.m. rather than putting them down -- it sure has been awhile! Emilio Salgari's pirate tale, The Tigers of Mompracem, serialized in the Italian newspaper La Nuova Arena in 1883-4, first published in book form in 1900, and here translated for the first time into English, is so chock full of action that the best cultural equivalent in North America that I could propose would have been the better dime-novel adventures of the late 19th-early 20th century. Or, perhaps think Douglas Fairbanks Sr.'s swashbuckling movies, or, if in a different genre, the Indiana Jones films -- this is the sort of thing Salgari has put to paper. Variously termed the father of heroes, the Italian Verne, the Italian Dumas, the father of Italian adventure fiction and even the grandfather of the Spaghetti Western, by his countrymen, Salgari sure could write a top-notch adventure novel.
 
Quotes from readers
It's a very good book that you don't want to miss because it has excitement and pretty much everything you can think of. I would recommend it to everybody, boys and girls. It's like the other Sandokan book, with the excitement and stuff. ~ A kid's review (Amazon.com)
I have to thank you (and the school for insisting that the kids spend some time reading every day!) for getting my grandson interested in reading again; he used to be a regular little bookworm until he discovered video games and then it was all over, but now he is actually looking forward to reading Salgari. While he is waiting, he's read some Jack London and now started "Journey to the Center of the Earth". It warms the literary cockles of my heart! ~ Sara M
My granddaughter loved Sandokan The Pirates of Malaysia. My wife is reading it now, and I will read it after. I read many of these books as a kid in Italy, in Italian of course. ~ Giusseppe S.
               
When Amazon sent me the new copy of The Two Tigers, and I read the first pages I realised that although it was in English it was the complete version, as Salgari taught me all the geography and flora and fauna descriptions world wide. My brothers and I read all his books in our youth. When we left to study abroad our collection was lost, we found a few copies in Spanish but they were abridged, and it was not the same. I find these English translations excellent. Please notify me when The Black Corsair becomes available. Eli R.
               
I just got my copy, and already started reading it, and guess what I LOVE IT!!!! My God it brings back memories. I'm looking forward to your other 2 books, and hopefully you will translate all 11 Sandokan books. Thanks for keeping me posted. Gerry Z.
               
I read all the Sandokan adventures when I was a child. I was overjoyed when I discovered one had been translated into English a couple of years back. I bought a copy of Sandokan The Tigers of Mompracem for my son and he was hooked immediately. Since then I've been waiting for the sequel. It's been a while, but it's been worth the wait. I bought it for my son and ended up reading it before him. Great read! Classic Salgari! Fast paced, great characters, wonderful battles and a few facts about Dyaks, Sarawak and nature sprinkled throughout the novel. Always nice to spend time with Sandokan and Yanez! ~ Kara Ortiez (Amazon.com)
       
 
 
 
Quotes from those that grew up reading Salgari's novels
 
    "The books Sartre had read as a child were the books we read in the Latin world, which I read as a child: Emilio Salgari, without whom there would be no Italian, French, Spanish, or Latin American Literature."

~ Carlos Fuentes, The Paris Review, Winter 1981 Watch interview excerpt from www.achievement.org
         
   

"During my childhood I got the best of my information about exotic countries not from textbooks but by reading the adventure novels of Jules Verne, Emilio Salgari and Karl May."

~ Umberto Eco

 

"I spent a large part of my childhood in my grandfather's library, devouring the adventure classics of Alexandre Dumas, Emilio Salgari, Joseph Conrad and Robert Louis Stevenson."

~ Arturo Perez Reverte

         
   

From ages one to ten I lived in Cochbamba, Bolivia. With regard to that city, where I was innocent and happy, I remember not so much the things that I did and the people that I knew, but rather the books that I read: Sandokan, Nostradamus, The Three Musketeers, Cagliostro, Tom Sawyer, Sinbad. Stories of pirates, explorers and bandits, romantic love … occupied the best part of my time. And because it was intolerable that these magic books should come to an end, I sometimes invented new chapters for them, or else changed the ending. Those additions and corrections to other people’s stories were the first pieces that I wrote, the first signs of my vocation as a story-teller.

Mario Vargas Llosa, Making Waves: Essays

     
         
   

"When I was your age, Salgari's books were my passion, they will become yours as well."

~ Che Guevara while reading bedtime stories to his daughter Hilda.

         
   

Beyond its value as art, literature can be a way to know and approximate the "other"—to penetrate his consciousness and live his dramas. Thus the "other" changes from a stranger—suspicious, antagonistic, threatening—to someone known and familiar; in this way, literature fosters tolerance. How can anyone whose youthful hero was the Malay Prince Sandokan, born of the fancy prose of the Italian novelist Emilio Salgari, be a racist? How can anyone touched by the eloquent pages of Anne Frank's diary become an anti-Semite? How can anyone who has admired Gabriel García Márquez's The Autumn of the Patriarch, Roa Bastos's I, the Supreme, or Mario Vargas Llosa's La fiesta del chivo—all literary sagas about Latin American dictators—favor military rule? Through its literature, a country knows itself. Life raised to the level of art—whether happy, positive, or regrettable—becomes shared experience, part of memory, elements of a common emotional range. And in the long run it is a pillar of democracy and tolerance. Even peace.

Secret Histories
On the creation of a Colombian national identity through crime fiction.

Santiago Gamboa, Boston Review

     
 
  "I found some of Mr. Salgari's books in an old trunk in my grandfather's basement, that trunk was the only legacy of my father who abandoned the family when I was very young. I read those books with a flashlight under the blanket in bed and those strong characters and great adventures shaped my taste in books for a long time."
~ Isabel Allende
     
 

"I love Salgari as much as I loved him when I was eight years old."

~ Claudio Magris

     
 

"I grew older. Books began to interest me. Buffalo Bill's adventures and Salgari's voyages carried me far away into the world of dreams..."

~ Pablo Neruda, Memoirs

     
 

In 1936 Gabriel Garcia Marquez (age 8) went to live with his father for a time in Sucre. He studied at Zipaquirá, a place that still holds many painful memories and where he spent a great amount of time in solitude. Of that time he writes:

“Zipaquira was a cold city… I studied in a large boarding school with two or three hundred children... Though there were no classes on Saturdays and Sundays, I would not leave the dormitory, not wanting to cope with the sadness and indifference of the townspeople. During those years of solitude, I spent all my free time reading the books of Jules Verne and Emilio Salgari.”

   
     
 

"Not a single person I know that read Salgari in their youth grew up to be a racist."

~ Paco Ignacio Taibo II

     
 

"When I turned four my grandfather began reading Salgari, Verne and Melville to me. Those stories fired my imagination."

~ Luis Sepulveda

     
 

"In the summer of 1904, at age five, my mother gave me The Black Corsair and The Pirates of Malaysia, books I still own to this day. So at age five I entered those exotic worlds that Salgari created in his numerous novels. I think I even prefered those stories to the more popular and more sophistciated works of Jules Verne."

~ Jose Luis Borges

   
 
 

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