Robert Louis Stevenson

Robert Louis Stevenson was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1850. The son of an engineer, Stevenson followed in his father’s footsteps by studying engineering and law at the University of Edinburgh. However, his passion for writing soon became more than a hobby, and he decided to pursue it on a full-time basis. This career choice initially upset his father, but Stevenson made a promise to complete his studies, and was admitted to the Scottish bar in 1875. Throughout his life, Stevenson was frequently in poor health, and he often travelled abroad in search of places with mild climates. He also wrote a number of essays detailing these trips. During one such journey to France, he met an American woman named Frances Osbourne, and later married her during a visit to California. Stevenson’s most famous work is the classic pirate tale Treasure Island, which was published in 1883. A fast-paced story of adventure, with mass appeal, it soon became popular across the world. Stevenson later created an infamous, but very intriguing, character in The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, published in 1886. His adventure story Kidnapped, a tale of a young boy and a stolen inheritance, was also published in the same year. In 1887, Stevenson headed for America with his wife, stepson, and mother. He had become famous in New York, and received many attractive offers from various publishers. It was soon after this move that he took up his pen for The Master of Ballantrae, a novel which is considered one of his best works. Stevenson eventually settled with his family, on the island of Samoa, where he died at the age of 44 on 3rd December 1894. While best known for writing tales of action and adventure, Robert Louis Stevenson is also remembered as an accomplished poet and essayist.

Kidnapped

Arriving at his Uncle’s house, David Balfour expects a warm welcome, a hearty meal and friendly conversation. Instead he is jailed, kidnapped, lost at sea, falsely accused of murder and finds himself on the run with a smuggler called Alan Breck.

Category: Fiction 10+
Publisher: Campfire
 
Paperback    £6.99
The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde

Bold visionary Henry Jekyll believed he could use his scientific knowledge to divide a person into two beings...

Category: Fiction 10+
Publisher: Campfire
 
Paperback    £6.99
The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde

The novel that gave birth to the idea of a split personality, The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde is one of Robert Louis Stevenson's most famous works.

Category: Fiction
Publisher: White's Books
 
Hardback    £6.99
Treasure Island

Treasure Island is the archetypal adventure story. This edition includes Robert Louis Stevenson's account of how he came to write the story on a rainy afternoon in Scotland, inspired by map that gave him inspiration. A full-page copy of Stevenson's map is reproduced.

Category: Fiction
Publisher: White's Books
 
Hardback    £17.95
 
Hardback    £6.99
Treasure Island

Fifteen men on the dead man's chest -
Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum.'

Category: Fiction 10+
Publisher: Campfire
 
Paperback    £6.99