Robert Louis Stevenson has written at least 397 books. Their most popular book is Strange case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde with 1345 saves with an average rating of 3.73⭐.
Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, the son of a lighthouse engineer. As a child he was often sick, especially during the winter months, possibly due to chronic bronchiectasis. He often tutored at home due to his illnesses, but at age eleven he was sent to Edinburgh Academy. He was always interested in writing stories, and his father published his first book, The Pentland Rising: A Page of History, 1666, in 1866.
In 1867 he went to the University of Edinburgh for engineering, although the discipline did not interest him. In 1871, he told his father that he intended to be a writer. His parents convinced him to return to the University of Edinburgh to read Law. After travelling to London and Paris, becoming active in literary circles in both cities, and a physical collapse in 1873 and recovery in the French Riviera, qualified for the Scottish bar in 1875. However, he never practised law, engaging instead in travel and writing.
In the course of his travels, Stevenson met Fanny Vandegrift Osbourne, an American mother of two who was in France to study art, in 1876. They met again in 1877 and became lovers, and he spent much of his time visiting with her and her children in France, until she returned to in San Francisco in 1878.
In 1879 he set sail to the U.S. to join her, becoming sick along the way, and when he arrived in San Francisco he was very ill. The now-divorced Vandegrift came to his bedside and nursed him to recovery. They married in 1880, honeymooned in the Napa Valley of California, then sailed with back to Britain, where he was reunited with his family.
For the next seven years, Stevenson travelled in search of a home that would benefit his health. He spent his summers in Scotland and England and his winters in France. During this time he wrote some of his best known work: Treasure Island (1883), A Child's Garden of Verses (1885), Kidnapped (1886), and The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886).
When his father died in 1887, Stevenson moved with his mother and family to the Adirondacks. In 1888, they set sail in a chartered yacht for the South Pacific. For nearly three years they wandered the eastern and central Pacific, visiting the Hawaiian Islands, the Gilbert Islands, Tahiti, New Zealand and the Samoan Islands. They took a second voyage to the Equator in 1889, and a third in 1890 to the South Seas islands.
In 1890 Stevenson purchased some land on one of the Samoan islands and established an estate. He adopted the native name Tusitala, and became involved in local politics, whcih led to clashes with the European bureaucrats who ruled the islands. He died in his estate, probably of cerebral hemorrhage, in 1894.
1992 • 1 Reader • 239 pages • 4.5
#1 of 1 in Prince Florizel
1878 • 1 Reader • 140 pages
1905 • 1 Reader • 80 pages
1989 • 1 Reader
1877 • 1 Reader • 88 pages • 4
1886 • 1 Reader
2008 • 1 Reader • 18 pages
1891 • 1 Reader • 62 pages • 3
1887 • 1 Reader • 1.5
1 Reader
1989 • 1 Reader • 519 pages
1 Reader
1886 • 1 Reader • 118 pages • 5
1 Reader
1 Reader • 1,242 pages
1924 • 1 Reader • 277 pages
1884 • 1 Reader • 100 pages
1993 • 1 Reader • 510 pages
1 Reader • 52 pages
2017 • 1 Reader • 768 pages
1884 • 1 Reader • 38 pages • 3
2005 • 1 Reader
#1 of 2 in David Balfour
1886 • 1 Reader • 48 pages • 3
1886 • 1 Reader
1988 • 1 Reader
2015 • 1 Reader • 480 pages
1886 • 1 Reader
1 Reader
1886 • 1 Reader • 80 pages • 4
1892 • 1 Reader
1886 • 1 Reader • 160 pages • 3
1886 • 1 Reader • 93 pages
1886 • 1 Reader • 111 pages
2017 • 1 Reader • 13,166 pages
1882 • 1 Reader • 243 pages
1886 • 1 Reader • 184 pages • 5
1886 • 1 Reader • 5
1888 • 1 Reader • 448 pages • 5
1 Reader
1889 • 1 Reader • 486 pages
1892 • 1 Reader
2022 • 1 Reader • 24,728 pages
2006 • 1 Reader • 704 pages
1 Reader
1886 • 1 Reader • 122 pages • 3
1886 • 1 Reader
1 Reader • 60 pages • 3
1889 • 1 Reader
1 Reader • 352 pages
1965 • 1 Reader • 411 pages
1963 • 1 Reader • 511 pages
1993 • 1 Reader • 77 pages
1886 • 1 Reader
1896 • 1 Reader • 343 pages
1 Reader
1 Reader
1886 • 1 Reader • 177 pages • 4
1882 • 1 Reader • 223 pages • 4
2002 • 1 Reader • 82 pages
2013 • 1 Reader • 152 pages • 3
1883 • 1 Reader • 217 pages
1 Reader
1 Reader • 4
2003 • 1 Reader • 3
#3 of 9 in Doug Bradley's Spinechillers
2009 • 1 Reader • 5
1 Reader
1883 • 1 Reader • 360 pages
1883 • 1 Reader • 2
1 Reader
1 Reader • 2
1886 • 1 Reader • 3
Planned book of 4 Poems to...
1 Reader • 200 pages
1891 • 1 Reader • 51 pages • 4
1879 • 1 Reader • 136 pages • 4
1883 • 1 Reader • 134 pages
1 Reader
1886 • 1 Reader • 240 pages • 4
2019 • 1 Reader • 21,084 pages
1896 • 1 Reader • 3
1996 • 1 Reader
2008 • 1 Reader • 40 pages
1 Reader
1886 • 1 Reader • 152 pages • 5
2005 • 1 Reader • 992 pages
1 Reader
1892 • 1 Reader
2008 • 1 Reader
2019 • 1 Reader • 252 pages
1 Reader • 16,903 pages
1886 • 1 Reader • 119 pages • 4
1 Reader
1970 • 1 Reader
2020 • 1 Reader • 244 pages
1896 • 1 Reader
1 Reader • 466 pages
2015 • 1 Reader
1 Great Short Stories of Detection, Mystery and Horror
1928 • 1 Reader • 1,231 pages