9.
TREASURE ISLAND
The story is told in the first person by Jim Hawkins, whose mother kept the Admiral Benbow Inn, and who shared in the adventures from start to finish. An old sea dog comes to this peaceful inn one day, apparently intending to finish his life there. He hires Jim to keep a watch out for other sailors, but despite all precautions, he is hunted out and served with the black spot that means death. Jim and his mother barely escape death when Blind Pew, Black Dog, and other pirates descend on the inn in search of the sea dog’s papers. Jim snatches up a packet of papers to square the sailor’s debt, when they were forced to retreat from the inn. The packet contains a map showing the location of the pirate Flint’s buried treasure, which Jim, Doctor Livesey, and Squire Trelawney determine to find. Fitting out a ship, they hire hands and set out on their adventure. Unfortunately, their crew includes one-legged Long John Silver, a pirate also in search of the treasure, and a number of his confederates. Jim, hidden in an apple barrel, overhears the plans of the crew to mutiny, and he warns his comrades. The battle between the pirates and Jim’s party is an exciting and bloody one, taking place both on the island and aboard ship. Jim escapes from the ship, discovers the marooned sailor, Ben Gunn, who has already found and cached the treasure, and finally the victors get safely aboard the ship with the treasure.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR :
Robert Louis Stevenson was born on November 13, 1850 in Edinburgh, Scotland. His parents were Thomas and Margaret Isabella Balfour Stevenson, and his nurse was Alison "Cummy" Cunningham. "You can never be good," he observed at the age of four, "unless you pray." Stevenson was a sickly child, and suffered from tuberculosis from an early age. Of course, those days in bed also gave him time to read and write. He became famous for "Treasure Island" (1882). He also wrote: "Kidnapped: (1886), "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" (1886), "The Black Arrow" (1888), "Master of Ballantrae" (1889), "The Wrong Box" (1889), and "Weir of Hermiston" (1896), which was unfinished at his death. Robert Louis Stevenson died on December 3, 1894, near Apia, in the Samoan Islands. He was 44 at the time of his death from a brain hemorrhage. Forty chiefs carried him to his burial site on the top of Mt. Vaea.
The story is told in the first person by Jim Hawkins, whose mother kept the Admiral Benbow Inn, and who shared in the adventures from start to finish. An old sea dog comes to this peaceful inn one day, apparently intending to finish his life there. He hires Jim to keep a watch out for other sailors, but despite all precautions, he is hunted out and served with the black spot that means death. Jim and his mother barely escape death when Blind Pew, Black Dog, and other pirates descend on the inn in search of the sea dog’s papers. Jim snatches up a packet of papers to square the sailor’s debt, when they were forced to retreat from the inn. The packet contains a map showing the location of the pirate Flint’s buried treasure, which Jim, Doctor Livesey, and Squire Trelawney determine to find. Fitting out a ship, they hire hands and set out on their adventure. Unfortunately, their crew includes one-legged Long John Silver, a pirate also in search of the treasure, and a number of his confederates. Jim, hidden in an apple barrel, overhears the plans of the crew to mutiny, and he warns his comrades. The battle between the pirates and Jim’s party is an exciting and bloody one, taking place both on the island and aboard ship. Jim escapes from the ship, discovers the marooned sailor, Ben Gunn, who has already found and cached the treasure, and finally the victors get safely aboard the ship with the treasure.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR :
Robert Louis Stevenson was born on November 13, 1850 in Edinburgh, Scotland. His parents were Thomas and Margaret Isabella Balfour Stevenson, and his nurse was Alison "Cummy" Cunningham. "You can never be good," he observed at the age of four, "unless you pray." Stevenson was a sickly child, and suffered from tuberculosis from an early age. Of course, those days in bed also gave him time to read and write. He became famous for "Treasure Island" (1882). He also wrote: "Kidnapped: (1886), "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" (1886), "The Black Arrow" (1888), "Master of Ballantrae" (1889), "The Wrong Box" (1889), and "Weir of Hermiston" (1896), which was unfinished at his death. Robert Louis Stevenson died on December 3, 1894, near Apia, in the Samoan Islands. He was 44 at the time of his death from a brain hemorrhage. Forty chiefs carried him to his burial site on the top of Mt. Vaea.