by Robert Louis Stevenson, 1883 (1850-1894, died in Samoa)
An old pirate shows up at an inn in England. The Admiral Benbow Inn, owned by young Jim Hawkins’ father.
The old pirate’s fellow pirates show up to steal his loot but Jim and his Mom get to it first and escape the Inn and hide. Jim doesn’t know he’s taken what they want more than anything – a map of Treasure Island and where the Capt. Flint’s treasure is buried.
Jim shows the map to Squire Trelawny and Dr. Livesey and they decide to get a ship together to sail to Treasure Island. The Squire recruits sailors and most are pirates, including Long John Silver, one-legged pirate, who poses as the cook for the boat. Original name of the book was going to be “The Sea Cook.”
They arrive on Treasure Island and Jim ends up saving the day 3 times: One – he overhears mutineers’ plans. Two – He meets Ben Gunn on the Island, a former pirate who ends up saving the good guys. Three – He captures the ship back from the pirates. The ship is called the Hispaniola.
Ben Gunn ends up saving the day because he had been left for dead on the island 2 years ago, and had set himself up a nice cave, found the treasure, packed it all up to his cave. He and Jim take care of the Squire, Dr. Livesey, and the Capt. and end up saving them from the no-good pirates.
The pirates all end up dead except three and Long John Silver. Long John Silver ends up striking a deal with Dr. Livesey and the Squire that they won’t prosecute him. They allow him to sale with them back to England but he ducks out with one bag of treasure at the first habited port they come to, never to be seen again.
Great action adventure tale. Lots of nautical terms I didn’t understand. Parts of the island were nice but other parts weren’t – swampy and disease-infested.