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3.57 AVERAGE


It's not often that "rollicking" can be used in a book review, but there are lots of good reasons why this is an adventure classic. While portions of it seem cliche, those cliches ~originated~ from this book, showing how wide an influence it's had on literature, pop culture, and our idea of what a "pirate" actually is. And the wonderful Mervyn Peake illustrations in this edition are just the icing on the cake.
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founddrama's review against another edition

DID NOT FINISH

(Was) reading this with/to The Boy. For a while he was really into it; then he lost interest. Couldn't get him re-engaged and/but mostly because he got *really* engaged in [b:The Hobbit|5907|The Hobbit|J.R.R. Tolkien|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1353852111s/5907.jpg|1540236] and a few other books. Anyway:

I can see why this is a classic, and though I was tempted to finish it on my own, I figured that I better stay true to the spirit of the reading (i.e., "with/to H.") and leave it on the shelf until he is ready to come back to it. (Not that I have any illusions there: we'll either be starting it over again, or he'll be reading it on his own.)

We left off on Chapter XXIV (pp. 225 in our copy).

How I missed out on reading this book as a kid, I am not sure! Robert Louis Stevenson's "A Child's Garden of Verses" was a favorite from a young age and the 1950 Disney adaptation of "Treasure Island," as well as the 1990's "Muppet Treasure Island" (ha!), were well-known to me.

This book isn't just for kids and is a rip-roaring escape vehicle. Many of the pirate tropes we're so accustomed abound in "Treasure Island." In fact, I only had to look up a few words because the pirate lexicon has become rather ingrained, especially from movies. This was the December book club pick for my Great Books group; interestingly, some members of the group really didn't like it and were disappointed there weren't more women/girls in the book. In my opinion, girls/women would have had a hard time hiding (and avoid rape) on a pirate ship, especially if they had hit puberty. There's a nice allusion to Edgar Allen Poe's "The Gold Bug" to watch out for.

What I really enjoyed about the book is that it offered more than an adventure tale with a moral at the end; there's some ambiguity on who's good and who's bad leaving the reader room to make their own conclusions.

We can only guess at what Stevenson might have written had he not been felled by illness at a relatively young age. It is also possible Stevenson might not have developed his imagination so fully had he not been ill from his youth onwards. Either way, this is a really good book.

Here are the questions I compiled/edited for the book club meeting using two sources (
https://www.litlovers.com/reading-guides/fiction/9285-treasure-island-stevenson?start=3
https://www.shmoop.com/treasure-island-book/questions.html):

1. Jim is probably around 12 or 13 years of age, a naive and impetuous boy. How does he change during the novel to achieve a level of maturity and perspective? Can you find some examples of how he vacillates between the worlds of childhood and adulthood?
2. Jim Hawkins is the narrator for 31 out of 34 chapters. Why might Stevenson have decided to switch perspectives for these three chapters? How different might the story have been if Jim were the only narrator?
3. With the exception of Jim's mother, who doesn't even get a name, there are no women at all in this novel. Why not? How might Treasure Island be different if Jim Hawkins were Jane Hawkins?
4. Many readers have considered Long John Silver “Treasure Island’s” most compelling character. What do you think? Is he thoroughly evil, a stock villain, or more complex? Does he possess any semblance of nobility? Why do you think Stevenson leaves Long John Silver's background and origins a mystery?
5. Both Captain Smollett and Long John Silver lead teams of men. How do their leadership abilities differ from one another? What do their styles suggest about their characters?
6. Jim sees Dr. Livesey as a good man...but not a grand one. Why? How do you see Livesey?
7. Role models are a central theme of the novel. Who do you think is the best example for Jim and who is Jim the most drawn to (Dr. Livesey, Squire Trelawney, Long John Silver, etc.)?
8. Is Ben Gunn stand a cautionary example of someone too long separated from society’s civilizing influences?
9. What are is the symbolic significance of flags to the story?
10. Some consider Treasure Island a book about unfettered desire. How does greed motivate the different characters and how does finding the treasure affect them? At the end of the book, why do the gold coins evoke nightmares rather than pleasurable dreams for Jim? Why does Jim have no desire to return for the silver that was left behind?
11. Why did Stevenson reveal the characters' religious views near the end of the adventure?
12. The ending of Treasure Island is intentionally ambiguous without a clear answer on where Long John Silver went. What do you think of Jim's moral reasoning on Silver’s escape? Are you glad that Silver gets away with a bag of cash? How might the tone of the novel be different if Silver hadn't escaped punishment?

The entire book all I kept picturing was the movie Treasure Planet... Sorry to the characters in the book for picturing them as aliens ;)
adventurous fast-paced

I’ve really enjoyed Robert Louis Stevenson in the past but I just couldn’t get into this one.

It was genuinely the most boring book I’ve read in my life.
adventurous tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: N/A
Diverse cast of characters: N/A
Flaws of characters a main focus: No

A cute little fanfic about what might have happened after the events of Starz's Black Sails. Some of the characters seemed a little OOC and I'm not sure why the author invented a whole separate kid to tell the story, but everyone to their taste!

(of course my favorite line in the book comes from Israel Hands: "For thirty years I've sailed the seas and seen good and bad, better and worse, fair weather and foul, provisions running out, knives going, and whatnot. Well, now I tell you, I never seen good come o' goodness yet. Him as strikes first is my fancy; dead men don't bite, them's my views."

Second favorite comes from Silver: "I'm ready. Take a cutlass, him that dares, and I'll see the color of his inside, crutch and all, before that pipe's empty.")
adventurous emotional funny fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: No