Sunday, June 17, 2012

In Appreciation of Robert Louis Stevenson


Ian Rankin, for the Guardian, delights in the classic author.

From the piece...

Stevenson had been born into smothering conformity. The rationalism and propriety of Edinburgh's New Town were not to his liking, and he did not want to enter the family business of lighthouse engineer. Having qualified as a lawyer, he found his true self in writing, and proved a master of diverse forms such as poetry for children (A Child's Garden of Verses), adventure stories for all ages (Treasure Island, Kidnapped) and chilling psychological horror (Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde). He trusted to reveries, saying "brownies" (spirits) had brought Jekyll and Hyde to him in a dream – albeit a dream affected by the experimental medication he was on at the time.

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