Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island Columbia Masterworks Set MM 553
![]() Stevenson was quite modest about the originality of Treasure Island, and admitted that there. were elements in the plot that were possibly contained in other stories. In his own foreword to Treasure Island he says: "No doubt the parrot once belonged to Robinson Crusoe, and other elements of the story can be found in Edgar Allan Poe. Once I chanced to pick up Tales of a Traveler and was surprised to find in that book Captain Billy Bones, his chest, and a good deal of material detail of my first chapters. In fact, the whole inner spirit appeared to be the property of Washington Irving." Stevenson's concept of the originality of some of the material proved to be of little importance to his readers, however, for Treasure Island become one of the most successful if not the best known -- of all his books, and remains, as always, a glorious adventure to all not acquainted with tile story, and a thesaurus of continuing thrills and interest to those who have read it again and again. ![]() Through the medium of phonograph records, Treasure Island literally comes to life. The stormy oaths of Long John Silver are no longer mere written bellowings on the printed page to be punctuated with an exclamation point. His rough and raucous voice is there to be heard, as is the chattering of the parrot, the dying groans of Billy Bones, and the battle between the ship's officers and the mutinous pirates in all its exciting detail. | |||||||
Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island Adapted by Ralph Rose - Produced by Les Mitchel Chorus under the direction of Richard Davis The Cast Narrator and Long John Silver - Basil Rathbone Jim Hawkins - Dix Davis Billy Bones - Ken Christy Squire Trelawney - Raymond Lawrence Captain Smollett - Richard Ahernim Pirate - Joseph Granby Ben Gunn - Harry Lang |