Synopses & Reviews
The solitary survivor on a deserted island, Robinson Crusoe gradually creates a life for himself, building a house and cultivating the land, and making a companion of the native whose life he saves. Daniel Defoe's enthralling story-telling and imaginatively detailed descriptions have ensured that his fiction masquerading as fact remains one of the most famous stories in English literature. On one level a simple adventure story, the novel also raises profound questions about moral and spiritual values, society, and man's abiding acquisitiveness.
Review
"An exemplary text--scholarly and cheap enough to ask students to buy."--Robert Wess, Oregon State University
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [xxvii]-xxviii).