Books
Robert Louis Stevenson

Kidnapped and Catriona

In “Kidnapped” (1886) and later fiction such as “The Master of Ballantrae” (1888), Stevenson examined some of the extreme and contrary currents of Scotland's past, often projecting a dualism of both personality and belief. This dualism is most famous in “Kidnapped”, whose two central characters are David Balfour, a Lowland Whig, and Alan Breck Stewart, a Highland Jacobite. The novel revolves around their friendship and their differences, suggesting a metaphor for Scotland itself. Stevenson wrote the sequel “Catriona” with the title David Balfour, but during serialisation in England the public became confused, thinking it might be a reprint of “Kidnapped”. At publisher Cassell's request, the title was changed to “Catriona”, after Balfour's daughter.
613 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2013
Publication year
2013
Publisher
Polygon
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