Les Voyages de Gulliver by Jonathan Swift
Let's break down the journey. Lemuel Gulliver is a practical man, a surgeon who just wants to see the world and make a living. His plans go sideways, hard. First, he washes up in Lilliput, where he's a literal giant among people the size of your hand. He helps them win a war, but their court politics are so absurdly petty (arguments over which end of an egg to crack!) that he barely escapes. Next stop: Brobdingnag, where the tables are turned. He's insect-sized to the gentle giants there, who find his descriptions of European warfare and politics utterly disgusting.
The Story
The first two voyages are the famous ones, but the book really finds its voice in the later trips. Gulliver visits the flying island of Laputa, where the rulers are so lost in abstract math and music they can't function in the real world. He meets immortal Struldbrugs, whose endless life is a curse, not a blessing. Finally, in the land of the Houyhnhnms (pronounced 'whin-ims'), he encounters rational, talking horses who live in peace. Their servants? The filthy, violent, lying Yahoos—creatures that look suspiciously like humans. Gulliver is horrified to realize he is, in their eyes, just a slightly more advanced Yahoo. He becomes so enamored with the horses' pure reason that he can't stand the sight of his own family when he finally returns home.
Why You Should Read It
Here's the thing: this book is funny. The satire is so sharp it draws blood. Swift takes aim at everything—politics, science, law, and human vanity—and doesn't miss. But it's also deeply uncomfortable. Gulliver starts as our everyman guide and ends up a broken misanthrope, disgusted by his own species. The book forces you to ask: Are we the rational creatures we claim to be, or are we just clever Yahoos? It's a question that hasn't gotten any easier to answer in 300 years.
Final Verdict
This is for anyone who loves a story that works on two levels. On the surface, it's a fantastic adventure with giants, tiny people, and flying islands. Just below, it's one of the smartest and most ruthless critiques of humanity ever written. Perfect for fans of dark humor, political satire, or classic literature that still feels shockingly relevant. A word of warning: don't expect a happy ending where the hero learns to love mankind again. Swift isn't that kind of writer.
This is a copyright-free edition. You can copy, modify, and distribute it freely.
Aiden Torres
1 year agoMy professor recommended this, and I see why.