R. L. Stevenson : A critical study

audiobook

R. L. Stevenson : A critical study

by Frank Swinnerton

EN·~4 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total

I BIOGRAPHICAL

34:09

II JUVENILIA

7:30

III TRAVEL BOOKS

24:29

IV ESSAYS

35:29

V POEMS

14:06

VI PLAYS

17:22

VII SHORT STORIES

35:21

VIII NOVELS AND ROMANCES

54:25

IX CONCLUSION

31:42

BIBLIOGRAPHY

18:47

Description

This work opens by explaining that its aim is strictly critical, using only a concise biographical sketch to give listeners the essential context of Stevenson’s life. It notes that many detailed biographies already exist, so the author chooses to outline the major events simply, allowing the subsequent analysis of his writing to proceed without constant reference to his personal history.

The study then turns to the young Robert Louis Stevenson, whose prodigious literary activity began in childhood and whose family’s engineering and clerical traditions left a lasting imprint on his imagination. It highlights his early essays, travel sketches, and the health struggles that shaped his perspective, while grouping his diverse output—stories, poems, essays—into clear sections for examination. Listeners will gain a focused overview of how his upbringing, frail constitution, and love of the sea informed the varied forms he mastered, setting the stage for a deeper appreciation of his enduring contributions to literature.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (262K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

London: Martin Secker, 1914.

Credits

Terry Jeffress, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)

Release date

2024-01-24

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Frank Swinnerton

Frank Swinnerton

1884–1982

A prolific English novelist, critic, and essayist, he spent decades at the center of literary life while writing more than fifty books of his own. His fiction and criticism helped connect late Victorian traditions with the modern literary world that followed.

View all books

You may also like