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Kidnapped,9780451527684
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Kidnapped


Author(s): Stevenson, Robert Louis
ISBN10:  0451527682
ISBN13:  9780451527684
Format:  Paperback
Pub. Date:  7/1/2000
Publisher(s): New Amer Library Classics

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SummaryTable of ContentsExcerpts
This memorable favorite among students is the story of young David Balfour, an orphan, whose miserly old uncle cheats him out of his inheritance and schemes to have him kidnapped, shanghaied, and sold into slavery. But justice triumphs -- after a spirited odyssey which includes a shipwreck, a hazardous journey across Scotland, intrigue, and narrow escapes. Rich in action and characterization, this exhilarating novel is considered by the author himself to be his finest work.
Introduction vii
Kidnapped xix
I Set Off Upon My Journey to the House of Shaws
1(5)
I come to My Journey's End
6(5)
I Make Acquaintance of My Uncle
11(7)
I Run a Great Danger in the House of Shaws
18(8)
I Go to the Queen's Ferry
26(6)
What Befell at the Queen's Ferry
32(5)
I Go to Sea in the Brig Covenant of Dysart
37(7)
The Roundhouse
44(5)
The Man with the Belt of Gold
49(9)
The Siege of the Roundhouse
58(7)
The Captain Knuckles Under
65(5)
I Hear of the ``Red Fox''
70(9)
The Loss of the Brig
79(6)
The Islet
85(9)
The Lad with the Silver Button: Through the Isle of Mull
94(8)
The Lad with the Silver Button: Across Morven
102(7)
The Death of the Red Fox
109(6)
I Talk with Alan in the Wood of Lettermore
115(8)
The House of Fear
123(7)
The Flight in the Heather: The Rocks
130(9)
The Flight in the Heather: The Heugh of Corrynakiegh
139(7)
The Flight in the Heather: The Moor
146(8)
Cluny's Cage
154(9)
The Flight in the Heather: The Quarrel
163(10)
In Balquhidder
173(7)
End of the Flight: We Pass the Forth
180(11)
I Come to Mr. Rankeillor
191(8)
I Go in Quest of My Inheritance
199(7)
I Come into my Kingdom
206(7)
Good-Bye
213(4)
Selected Bibliography 217

Kidnapped


By Robert Louis Stevenson

Signet Classics

Robert Louis Stevenson
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0451527682


Chapter One

Introduction by Margot Livesey

I.

When I was growing up in Scotland, Robert Louis Stevenson was the first author whom I knew by name, and he remains the only one whom I can truthfully claim to have been reading all my life. From an early age, my parents read to me from A Child's Garden of Verses, and I soon learned some of the poems by heart.

I have a little shadow
that goes in and out with me,
And what can be the use of him
is more than I can see.

Perhaps I recognized, even then, Stevenson's unique gift for keeping a foot in two camps. While the poems vividly captured my childish concerns, somewhere in the margins shimmered the mystery of adult life. A few years later Kidnapped was the first chapter book I read, and I can still picture the maroon binding and the black-and-white drawings that illustrated David Balfour's adventures. At the age of seven, a book without pictures would have been out of the question, but, in fact, they turned out to be superfluous. I could imagine everything that happened just from the words on the page, although I must admit to the small advantage that the view from my bedroom window-bare hills, rocks, heather-was very much like the landscape of Kidnapped.

At first glance such early acquaintance might seem like a good omen for an author's reputation. In actuality, that Stevenson is so widely read by children has tended to make him seem like an author from who, as adults, we have little to learn. It is worth noting that his contemporaries would not have shared this prejudice. Nineteenth-century readers did not regard children's books as separate species. Stevenson's own father often reread The Parent's Assistant, a volume of children's stories, and Leslie Stephen, Virginia Woolf's father, writes of staying up late to finish Treasure Island.

Like the shadow of his poem, Stevenson's reputation has waxed and waned at an alarming rate. He died in a blaze of hagiography, which perhaps in part explains the fury of later critics. F.R. Leavis in The Great Tradition dismisses Stevenson (in a footnote, no less) as a romantic writer, guilty of fine writing, and in general Stevenson has not fared as well as his friend Henry James. People comment with amazement that Borges and Nabokov praised his novels. Still, his best work has remained in print for over a hundred years, and his is among that small group of authors to have given a phrase to the language: Jekyll and Hyde.

Besides our perception of Stevenson as a children's author, two other factors may have contributed to his ambiguous reputation. Although his list of publications is much longer than most people realize-he wrote journalism and travel pieces for money-he failed to produce a recognizable oeuvre, a group of works that stand together, each resonating with the others. In addition, the pendulum of literary taste has swung in a direction that Stevenson disliked and was determined to avoid: namely, pessimism. After reading The Portrait of a Lady he wrote to James begging him to write no more such books, and while he admired the early work of Thomas Hardy, he hated the darker Tess of the d'Urbervilles. The English writer John Galsworthy commented memorably on this aspect of Stevenson when he said that the superiority of Stevenson over Hardy was that Stevenson was all life, while Hardy was all death.


From the Trade Paperback edition.



Excerpted from Kidnapped by Robert Louis Stevenson Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.


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