Treasure Island, by Robert Louis Stevenson, 311 pages
I realized that the only version of Treasure Island or A Christmas Carol that I was really familiar with were both the Muppet versions... so I am attempting to change that. Step one was reading the original Treasure Island. And while it shouldn't be hard to imagine, seeing as it's a classic and all, this book actually stands up to the test of time (mostly). Young Jim Hawkins finds himself in possession of a treasure map- and there the seafaring and pirate adventure begins. It's interesting to read this and realize how many current pirate tropes truly originated in this one work- sort of like reading Dracula and realizing its long-lasting effects. There are quite a bit of nautical and ship terms thrown about that my eyes kind of glazed over in response to, but this is an approachable work of classic fiction for those looking to read an older book. Also, it's one of those that you can read for free via Project Gutenberg (which is where I read it, so this book cover and pages are an approximation made courtesy of goodreads).
This blog is the home of the St. Louis Public Library team for the Missouri Book Challenge. The Missouri Book Challenge is a friendly competition between libraries around the state to see which library can read and blog about the most books each year. At the library level, the St. Louis Public Library book challenge blog is a monthly competition among SLPL staff members and branches. For the official Missouri Book Challenge description see: http://mobookchallenge.blogspot.com/p/about-challenge.h
Monday, December 22, 2014
Treasure Island
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment