The author: Robert Louis Stevenson
Robert Louis
Stevenson (1850-1894) was born in Edinburgh, and he was a Scottish writer. He died
in the occidental part of Samoa, whose habitants put him the nickname of “Tusitala”
which means “the one who tells stories”. He used to write narrative novels.
His father
worked as an engineer, and Stevenson graduated in law, subject that he studied
in the University of Edinburgh. However, he never worked as a lawyer. He tried
to live in places where the air was clean, as he had problems with his lungs. He
travelled a lot, and that’s the reason why all his first novels were about
descriptions of those places.
In one trip to
California he met Fanny Osbourne, an American lady who was divorced and was 8
years older than him. They got married in 1879, year in which he became a
famous novelist because of the book called Treasure
Island. He travelled to Switzerland and to France, and in 1884 he came back
to the United Kingdom, where he stayed until 1887. During that period of time
he published other novels like The black
arrow: A tale of the Two Roses, Kidnapped and his most famous one: The strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,
which was and is considered one of the best novels about fantastic terror.
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