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Robert Louis Stevenson, long recognized as a master storyteller and
essayist, was also one of the finest and most delightful of letter
writers. Yale University Press is now publishing the definitive
edition of Stevenson's collected letters in eight handsomely
produced volumes. The edition will contain nearly 2,800 letters,
only 1,100 of which have been published before. Volumes III and IV
cover the period from August 1879 to June 1884. The six hundred
letters tell for the first time the full story of Stevenson's
reckless journey to California as an "amateur emigrant," during
which he gained a wife but wrecked his health. They describe his
return to Europe and his futile search to improve his health in
Scotland, Switzerland, and France and reveal interesting aspects of
the writing of Treasure Island, Virginibus Puerisque (his first
volume of collected essays), and many poems later collected in
Underwoods and in A Child's Garden of Verses. Volumes V and VI
cover the period from July 1884 to September 1890 and comprise over
nine hundred letters. During this time, Stevenson lived as a
chronic invalid for three years in Bournemouth, England; searched
for improved health in the United States and the South Seas; and
achieved fame and success with the Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and
Mr. Hyde, Kidnapped, and A Child's Garden of Verses. The letters
convey Stevenson's courage and gaiety in the face of illness and
his affection for his family and friends. They also reveal the
devoted care given him by his wife, Fanny Stevenson. Ernest Mehew's
detailed annotation provides all the background necessary to fully
enjoy Stevenson's letters.
Robert Louis Stevenson, celebrated author of such treasured
classics as Treasure Island, Kidnapped, and The Strange Case of Dr.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, has long been recognized as a master
storyteller and essayist. But he was also a delightful and
instructive letter writer. Now, in the centenary of his death, Yale
University Press is publishing the definitive edition of
Stevenson's collected letters in eight handsomely produced volumes.
The edition will contain nearly 2800 letters; only 1100 have been
published before, and many of these were abridged or expurgated.
The letters make fascinating reading, not only for those interested
in Stevenson's life and work but also for everyone interested in
nineteenth-century literature and social history. The letters in
volumes I and II, which cover the years from 1854 to 1879, reveal
Stevenson's struggles to achieve success as an author. We learn of
his years as a student, his work, and his travels. We meet the
people who became his chief correspondents for the rest of his
life, including Sidney Colvin, who was to be his literary mentor
and lifelong friend; the poet and critic W.E. Henley; and Fanny
Osbourne, who later became Stevenson's wife. During this period
Stevenson published stories and essays and two books, An Inland
Voyage and Edinburgh: Picturesque Notes, and set off on the journey
to the Cevennes later immortalized in his famous Travels with a
Donkey. Ernest Mehew's introduction and detailed annotation place
the letters in a biographical framework that gives a chronology of
Stevenson's life; explains his family background; and identifies
the people he met, the literary projects he planned, and the
contemporary events to which he refers.
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