Synopses & Reviews
This collection includes Treasure Island, The Black Arrow, "The Treasure of Franchard," "Will o'the Mill," "The Sire de Malétroit' Door," "The House of Eld," and "The Song of the Morrow." Stevenson is one of the world' great storytellers. From the gripping opening of Treasure Island, to the unforgettable portrait of Richard III in The Black Arrow, his gift for driving narrative and marvelously paced prose holds the attention of the reader from beginning to end. This volume is designed to showcase the full range of Stevenson' talents as a writer of adventure. Included are not only some of his most famous works but also lesser known gems from The New Arabian Nights and Fables. Edited by Francis Russell Hart.
Synopsis
Along with Alexander Dumas, Stevenson is one of the world's great writers of adventure. From the gripping opening of Treasure Island to the unforgettable vignettes of the future Richard III in The Black Arrow, his gift for a memorable phrase holds the attention from beginning to end.
Synopsis
Treasure Island/The Black Arrow/The Treasure of Franchard/Will o' the Mill/
The Sire de Mal�troit's Door/The House of Eld/The Song of the Morrow
Stevenson is one of the world's great storytellers. From the gripping opening of Treasure Island, to the unforgettable portrait of Richard III in The Black Arrow, his gift for driving narrative and marvellously paced prose holds the attention of the reader from beginning to end.
This volume is designed to showcase the full range of Stevenson's talents as a writer of adventure. Included are not only some of his most famous works but also lesser known gems from The New Arabian Nights and Fables.
About the Author
Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894) was born and educated in Edinburgh. He was a sickly child, and most of his adult years were to be spent traveling in search of a climate which would do least damage to his lungs. He began his writing career with essays, short stories, and travel writing, most notably Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes (1879). He went to California to marry in 1880. The journey nearly killed him, but he wrote of his experiences in Across the Plains (1892), The Amateur Emigrant (1895), and The Silverado Squatters (1883). He is, perhaps, best remembered for his first novel Treasure Island (1883), and his early reputation was made with this and other examples of adventure fiction, not least Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde which appeared as a paperback thriller in 1886.
Table of Contents
The house of Eld -- Will o' the mill -- The Sire de Maletroit's door -- Treasure Island -- The treasure of Franchard -- The black arrow -- The song of the morrow.