ROBINSON CRUSOE
BY DANIEL DEFOE
(1660–1731)
created by Savino Carrella

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   captured      comfort      consequence      during      eventually      few      food      island      later      met      narrative      On      popularity      proves      real      servant      solitude      style      suspense      uninhabited      use      vessel      visited      volume      wealth   

This world-famous tale of adventure is supposed to have been suggested by the experience of Alexander Selkirk, who was shipwrecked and lived for years on a desert . Robinson Crusoe, a young Englishman, goes to sea in his youth, is by the corsairs, is shipwrecked and washed ashore on an island. The consists of a careful description of his adventures and experiences the twenty-eight years of his exile. It tells of his ingenious contrivances for his , how he builds him a habitation, procures to sustain life, and makes a raft by which means he gets to the shipwrecked , and succeeds in getting many articles that are of to him. An exciting incident in the story is when, after eighteen years of , he comes across the imprint of a human foot in the sand, and in of this discovery is thrown into a state of terror and consternation. He lives for a long time in great , as he finds evidence that the island is by cannibals; but it is not until six years later that he encounters them. this occasion one of their victims escapes, and Crusoe saves his life and keeps him for a and companion. He names him Friday, and teaches him civilized ways. He honest, devoted, and reliable, and shares Crusoe’s life and duties until, a years later, they are rescued and taken from the island on an English ship. Crusoe returns to England, where he marries and settles down to enjoy the that he has accumulated during his strange adventures. The first volume ended at this point, and with such remarkable success that the author, four months later, brought out a second entitled, ‘The Farther Adventures of Robinson Crusoe’; and this in turn was followed, one year , by a third relating his ‘Serious Reflections’ during his wanderings. The simplicity of , and the realistic atmosphere which pervades the narrative, have caused the of this book to remain unimpaired.
(adapted from "The Reader’s Digest of Books" by Helen Rex Keller)