Stevenson Under the Palm Trees

Stevenson Under the Palm Trees

by Alberto Manguel (Author)

Synopsis

In the lush, uninhibited atmosphere of Samoa, Robert Louis Stevenson is languishing with the disease that will soon kill him; when a chance encounter with the mysterious Scottish missionary, Mr Baker, turns his thoughts back to his conservative, post-Reformation Edinburgh home. As Stevenson's meetings with the tantalizingly nebulous missionary become increasingly strange, a series of crimes against the native population sours the atmosphere. With its playful nod to Stevenson's life and work Manguel has woven an intoxicating tale in which fantasy infiltrates reality, repressed desires take-on physical form, dreams become nightmares, and endings are both inevitable and surprising. This is the first of several novellas featuring deceased literary figures at the heart of a murder mystery: based on a highly acclaimed Brazilian series entitled Death or Literature. New fiction in this occasional series comes from Louise Welsh (on Christopher Marlowe) and Bernardo Carvalho (Fear of de Sade - June 2004).

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 112
Edition: Main
Publisher: Canongate Books Ltd
Published: 05 Jan 2004

ISBN 10: 1841954497
ISBN 13: 9781841954493

Media Reviews
A small but rich little instant classic, as though Joseph Conrad had sent up a perfect new tale. -Kirkus Reviews A fine stylist, Manguel punctuates the story with hyper-real descriptions of Samoa and Stevenson's memories of Edinburgh. -Publishers Weekly Manguel merges fantasy and reality to create a deceptively simple tale that's both evocative and subtly disturbing. -The Observer (London)
Author Bio
Internationally acclaimed as an essayist and novelist, Alberto Manguel is also a prize-winning translator and has edited ten anthologies. Author of the award-winning A History of Reading, News from a Foreign Country Came and Stevenson Under the Palm Trees, his most recent book is A Reading Diary. Born in Buenos Aires, he has lived in Italy, England, Tahiti and Canada, and now lives in France, where he was named an Officer of the Order of Arts and Letters.