
Otok sa blagom / Dr. Jekyll i gospodin Hyde
Treasure Island is an adventure novel in which young Jim Hawkins searches for pirate treasure alongside the dangerous Long John Silver. In the novel Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the doctor unleashes his evil side that ultimately destroys him.
Robert Louis Stevenson is one of the most magical storytellers of Victorian literature. His two most famous works, Treasure Island (1883) and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886), perfectly represent the two sides of his talent: adventurous joy and dark psychological depth.
Treasure Island is a classic adventure novel that forever shaped the pirate genre. Through the eyes of young Jim Hawkins, we follow the search for the treasure of Captain Flint. On the ship Hispaniola and a tropical island, a tense game of treachery, courage and cunning takes place, led by one of the most interesting characters in literature – the charming, dangerous and calculating one-legged pirate Long John Silver. The novel celebrates boyish courage, resourcefulness and adventure, but at the same time realistically portrays the moral grayness of people. It is full of the atmosphere of the salty sea, rustling palm trees and the thrill of discovery.
In contrast, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is a dark, spooky novel about the duality of human nature. The eminent doctor Henry Jekyll creates a potion that releases his evil side – the ugly, violent and amoral Edward Hyde. What begins as a scientific experiment turns into a horrific struggle for control over one's own body and soul. The story, told through the prism of lawyer Utterson, masterfully builds tension and mystery, and ends with a shocking confession. The work is a genius metaphor of Victorian society, of repressed impulses and the struggle between good and evil in every human being.
Both novels demonstrate Stevenson's exceptional ability to create vivid characters, powerful atmospheres and universal themes that appeal to young and adult readers alike more than 140 years later.
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