Kidnapped
by Robert Louis Stevenson
Buy on AmazonKIDNAPPED is an adventure story that has become the model for any thriller of escape and suspense. Set in 1751, the flight of David Balfour and Alan Breck across the Highlands of Scotland is based on real events. Though he wrote the book to make money, while living as an invalid in Bournemouth. Stevenson was proud of it; he inscribed a presentation copy with the couplet. Here is the one sound page of all my writing. The one I'm proud of and that I delight in. Rowland Hilder is famous for his paintings of the English countryside but his work in book illustration covered a much wider canvas. His drawing for KIDNAPPED were first published in 1930 and have undeservedly, been long out of print.…
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"Robert Louis Stevenson's "Kidnapped." I still have "Treasure Island" to look forward to."
By the Book: Edmund White · nytimes.com
"Once I’d banished King Arthur, and I was 9 or 10, the characters I lived through were the two leading men in “Kidnapped,” the strait-laced young David Balfour and the weathered desperado Alan Breck."
By the Book: Hilary Mantel · nytimes.com
"The first book I remember reading was Kidnapped, by Robert Louis Stevenson. I must have been about 8."
By the Book: Phillip Lopate · nytimes.com
"I started to read it, and I hadn't; it was brand-new and immediately great. Is there a better storyteller?"
By the Book: Roddy Doyle · nytimes.com
"Being Scottish, it’s one I can read again and again. I think the difference between the Lowland Scot and the Highlander is really brought out between Alan Breck and David Balfour. It’s very well written, very well done – and I think Robert Louis Stevenson has great charm. He’s very hard on marriage, you know. He seems to be rather sour about marriage, but not in this book. I suppose it would be, but it still captures my heart – particularly as I write about the Highlands in the Hamish Macbeth stories. The fact that he’s captured the character of the Highlander – which is still a different creature to the Lowland Scot. No, I’m not: I was born in Glasgow. We had a croft in the North of Scotland, up in Hamish Macbeth country for a short time. It’s wonderful countryside, a marvellous setting for a murder. The wind just screams from horizon to horizon – it’s like living in a speeded-up nature film. You open up the kitchen door and catch a passing sheep… So that is the attraction of Kidnapped. I read it when I was in my teens, of course. I read it again about five years ago, and it still charmed me. It’s the same with Through the Looking Glass, though I haven’t put that down as one of my choices. I think it’s simply because of having lived in the Highlands, and my husband having sheep in the Highlands, and having fallen in love with the better side of the Highland character."
Mysteries and Other Favourite Books · fivebooks.com