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Used
Paperback
1985
$3.36
First published in 1879, this is Robert Louis Stevenson's personal account of a 12-day walking tour he undertook in the autumn of 1878. Travelling through the mountainous Cevennes region of southern France, Stevenson and his companion, a donkey named Modestine, averaged 10 miles a day. Stevenson was also the author of Kidnapped , Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde , The Master of Ballantrae and Treasure Island .
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Used
Paperback
1991
$3.36
In October 1878 the lovesick Robert Louis Stevenson made a journey across the mountains of the Cevennes in Southern France. His only companion was the resolutely obstinate Modestine, a diminutive she-ass, not much bigger than a dog . By day he struggled on foot across the ominously beautiful landscape which had once been riven by religious persecution, and slept at night under the stars, in friendly but primitive inns and, once, in a Trappish monastery. As he travelled, Stevenson realized that he had also embarked on a revealing spiritual odyssey that was to change his perception of tolerance, fellowship and human love. This account of the journey is characterized by the author's natural gaiety as a writer, which breaks through his lover's despair.
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Used
Hardcover
1986
$3.87
In October 1878 the lovesick Robert Louis Stevenson made a journey across the mountains of the Cevennes in Southern France. This account of his revealing spiritual odyssey is characterised by the author's natural gaiety as a writer, which breaks through his lover's despair.
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New
Paperback
2004
$11.13
In 1878, Robert Louis Stevenson was suffering from poor health, struggling to survive on the income derived from his writings, and tormented by his infatuation with Fanny Osbourne, a married American woman. His response was to embark on a journey through the Cevennes with a donkey, Modestine, and a notebook, which he later transformed into Travels with a Donkey. Just a few months after publication, Stevenson was off again this time crossing the Atlantic and the breadth of America in the hope of being re-united with Fanny, an experience he recorded in The Amateur Emigrant. Both pieces are classics of travel writings, which reveal as much about Stevenson's character as the landscape he travels through.