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  • MacLehose Press
  • MacLehose Press

Robert Louis Stevenson in Samoa

Joseph Farrell

8 Reviews

Rated 0

Polynesia, Samoa, Biography: literary, Prose: non-fiction, Literary studies: fiction, novelists & prose write, Australasian & Pacific history, Travel writing

The story of the last years of the author of TREASURE ISLAND and JEKYLL AND HYDE, lived out in the earthly paradise of the Samoan Islands. Shortlised for the Saltire Society Non Fiction Book of the Year Award

Shortlised for the Saltire Society Non Fiction Book of the Year Award

Almost every adult and child is familiar with his TREASURE ISLAND, but few know that Robert Louis Stevenson lived out his last years on an equally remote island, which was squabbled over by colonial powers much as Captain Flint's treasure was contested by the mongrel crew of the Hispaniola.

In 1890 Stevenson settled in Upolu, an island in Samoa, after two years sailing round the South Pacific. He was given a Samoan name and became a fierce critic of the interference of Germany, Britain and the U.S.A. in Samoan affairs - a stance that earned him Oscar Wilde's sneers, and brought him into conflict with the Colonial Office, who regarded him as a menace and even threatened him with expulsion from the island.

Joseph Farrell's pioneering study of Stevenson's twilight years stands apart from previous biographies by giving as much weight to the Samoa and the Samoans - their culture, their manners, their history - as to the life and work of the man himself. For it is only by examining the full complexity of Samoa and the political situation it faced as the nineteenth century gave way to the twentieth, that Stevenson's lasting and generous contribution to its cause can be appreciated.

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Praise for Robert Louis Stevenson in Samoa

  • Marvellously done, thanks to the lively fair-mindedness of Farrell's excellent prose. Vivid, scholarly, informative, but above all a really good read.

  • Scholarly, engaging and deeply thoughtful, Joseph Farrell's account of Stevenson's last four years in Samoa has the feel of an instant classic in studies of the writer. The Navigator Islands had fascinated Stevenson for years, but when he went to live there in 1890, frail and famous, the realities of life in on the margins of his own culture, language and society changed him forever. Rarely can a place and a writer have had so much effect on each other: Joseph Farrell's brilliant study takes us further into this fascinating relationship than ever before.

  • Joseph Farrell's is the best book I have seen on Stevenson's years in Samoa, the most enviable of any writer's ever. Farrell is fair to both his sunburnt Bohemianism and his unremitting hard work.

  • Stevenson in Samoa is very good indeed . . . It is full of interest and repays the attention it demands. - Scotsman.

  • A sparkling account of the last years of Stevenson's life . . . An emeritus professor at the University of Strathclyde and translator of literary works from Italian, Farrell comes armed with perceptive, elegant prose and a revealing understanding of Stevenson's peculiarly Scottish frame of mind. - Spectator.

  • A bracing amalgam of history, biography and travel . . . Farrell has done his compatriot proud. - Financial Times.

  • A very profound examination of Stevenson's Samoa in light of current and present ideologies. - Glasgow Herald.

  • Farrell provides a welcome service by offering us the fascinating story of Stevenson's last great roll with the dice. - Spectator.

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Joseph Farrell

Joseph Farrell is Emeritus Professor at the University of Strathclyde. His books include a cultural history of Sicily and biographies of Dario Fo and Leonardo Sciascia. He is also a renowned translator from the Italian, whose translations include works by Leonardo Sciascia, Vincenzo Consolo, Dario Fo and Valerio Varesi. He lives in Glasgow.

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