Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson

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(Mass Market Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: June 2005
  • 304pp
  • Sales Rank: 9,344

    Reader Rating: (94 ratings)

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
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    • Features

    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: June 2005
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 304pp
    • Sales Rank: 9,344

    Synopsis

    Set sail to the heart of adventure with cabin boy, Jim Hawkins, aboard the legendary scoundrel, Captain Long John Silver. A secret treasure map becomes the key to heart-pounding thrills, danger and swashbuckling action as a boy faces the high seas and the grandest pirate of all in the adventure of a life time.

    Annotation

    Chronicles the joys and sorrows of the four March sisters as they grow into young ladies in mid-nineteenth-century New England.

    Publishers Weekly

    Stevenson’s prototypical swashbuckling story receives a traditional treatment in this unabridged, oversize version. Lawrence evokes the essence of classic adventure stories with his vinyl-cut illustrations, as thick black shapes are tempered by muted tones of blue, gold and green. The grimacing faces of pirates are appropriately blemished and begrimed, elegant vessels are seen moored under a starry sky and the island’s wild intrigue is captured in subtle, grainy glimpses. As they follow Jim Hawkins to sea, readers will feel they’ve discovered a true relic with this edition. Ages 9–14. (Oct.)

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    Biography

    The Victorian poet and novelist Robert Louis Stevenson once said, "Don't judge each day by the harvest you reap, but by the seeds you plant." The author of the magical A Child's Garden of Verses and the chilling The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Stevenson indeed planted powerful literary seeds -- that grew into undisputed classics.

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    Customer Reviews

    Treasure Island Reviewby booksreadbooks

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    September 13, 2009: In this entertaining adventure novel, young Jim Hawkins normal and boring life keeping the Admiral Benbow Inn gets turned upside down. It starts when a mysterious man who's known only as the Captain stays at the inn for a while. When he arrives, he asks Jim to keep a look out for "a seafaring man with one leg" and to alert the Captain if he sees him. The Captain motivated Jim by paying him a fourpenny piece per week. One night a blind man named Pew comes in and gives the Captain the black spot, which is the equivalent of the kiss of death. The Captain starts panicking and dies of a stroke. So Jim and his mother search through the Captain's chest and find a treasure map. Later that night, Pew and his gang of pirates storm the inn, searching for the map that Jim and his mother recovered. Jim and his mom were lucky to escape the pirates. Jim brings the map to Dr. Livesey and Squire Trelawney, and they round up a group of men, including an inn keeper with one leg who says he has had experience at sea, and a ship owned by Captain Smollet and they set sail for Treasure Island aboard the Hispaniola. Captain Smollet was reluctant to go along with the journey in the first place because he wasn't comfortable with more men he didn't know than his own crew because he was afraid of mutiny. His suspicions would later be proven correct. Along the journey, Jim hears a conversation between the one-legged man, Long John Silver, and two crewmen that could jeopardize the lives of the whole crew!

    The book was very well written. Robert Louis Stevenson does an excellent job of telling the story through the eyes of a young boy. The book was published in 1873, so Stevenson uses a lot of words most people wouldn't know. Another thing about books in the 19th Century is that authors like Stevenson would use a lot of detail, so there were some sections in the book that I would just skip because it had too much detail and it wasn't that important. Most authors today know that too much detail bores readers, but back then people loved detail.

    When you look at the size of the book, don't assume that it is a quick read. There are a lot of words per page and there are a lot of sections that you really have to read over a couple of times to get what's going on. There were several words that I had to ask my mom what they meant, too. I would recommend this book to anybody who has a great appreciation of English literature (or if your language arts teacher makes you read a classic novel).

    TREASURE ISLAND - COMPACT DISCby ginamarie1963

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    August 08, 2009: I purchased this for my father, he is blind and truly misses being able to watch TV. He also is crippled and can't do much but sit and listen to the TV or radio. I've purchased the old radio shows and mystery shows from his childhood for gifts but his all time favorite are the old western shows. Believe me, he'll be getting more books/shows on disc in the future.


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