| Author | W. S. Lach-Szyrma | 
|---|---|
| Language | English | 
| Genre | Science fiction | 
| Publisher | Wyman and Sons, Jurassic London | 
| Publication date | 1883 | 
| Publication place | England | 
| Media type | |
| Pages | 220 | 
| OCLC | 7261871 | 
Aleriel, or A Voyage to Other Worlds is an 1883 science fiction novel by Wladislaw Somerville Lach-Szyrma, a Polish-English curate, author, and historian.
The book is an expanded version of Lach-Szyrma's earlier work A Voice from Another World , published in 1874. A sequel series, "Letters from the Planets", was published in nine parts between 1887 and 1893 in Cassell's Family Magazine . [1] [2]
Published in 1883, Aleriel is a Victorian novel, which was previously thought to be the first published work to apply the word Martian as a noun (it is now known that the word had been so used as early as 1869 [3] [4] ): After the protagonist, Aleriel, lands on Mars, he buries his spacecraft in snow, "so that it might not be disturbed by any Martian who might come across it". [5] The novel portrays Venus and Mars as utopias, Jupiter and Saturn as primitive, and the Moon as desolate. [6]
A new edition was published in 2015. It includes the same text and a new introduction by Richard Dunn (Royal Museums Greenwich) and Marek Kukula (Royal Observatory Greenwich). [7]
 Aleriel; or A Voyage to Other Worlds  public domain audiobook at  LibriVox
 Aleriel; or A Voyage to Other Worlds  public domain audiobook at  LibriVox