Daniel Defoe was born Daniel Foe sometime around 1660 in London, England. He was a trader, writer and spy, and is considered one of the founders of the English novel. He later added the De to his name to sound more aristocratic, claiming to be descended from Royal blood.
He worked as a merchant, but was usually in debt. In 1684, he married Mary Tuffley for her $5,000 dowry, a large amount in those days. The marriage was not a happy one, but lasted 50 years. The couple had eight children.
In 1685, he was part of a rebellion, then jailed and pardoned, becoming a secret agent for the new king. In 1692, he was arrested for debts and dishonest dealings. In 1696, he ran a tile and brick factory.
When the king died in 1702, he was once again placed in prison, this time for political activism. He was released again in exchange for working as an intelligence agent for the enemy.
Defoe wrote more than 500 books, articles and pamphlets during his career as an author, many under nearly 200 psuedonyms. The majority of the novels, such as "Robinson Crusoe" and "Moll Flanders" were published during a five year period from 1719 to 1724. "Robinson Crusoe" is actually based on the real life story of Scottish castaway Alexander Selkirk, who spent four years stranded on a deserted island and on Henry Pitman, who escaped from prison and was shipwrecked.
Daniel died on April 24, 1731, while hiding from debt collectors. He is buried in London, England.
Robinson Crusoe
by Daniel Defoe
Paperback
- ISBN-13: 9781619490369
- Publisher: Empire Books
- Publication date: 11/22/2011
- Pages: 328
- Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.69(d)
- Age Range: 9 - 13 Years
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Una de las obras más emblemáticas de la literatura de aventuras. Narra las aventuras del joven Robinson Crusoe, un náufrago inglés que pasa 28 años en una remota isla tropical, donde a pesar de las muchas dificultades, logra sobrevivir. Publicada en 1719, las "Aventuras de Robinson Crusoe" es un alegato a favor de las potencialidades del ser humano: su afán de superación y su necesidad de hermanamiento con sus semejantes.
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A labored retelling of the classic survival tale in graphic format, heavily glossed and capped with multiple value-added mini-essays.
Along with capturing neither the original's melodrama nor the stranded Crusoe's MacGyver-esque ingenuity in making do, Graham's version quickly waxes tedious thanks to forced inclusion of minor details and paraphrased rather than directly quoted dialogue in an artificially antiquated style ("You Friday. Me Master"). Frequent superscript numbers lead to often-superfluous footnotes: "Crusoe, a European, assumes that he is superior to other races. This attitude was usual at the time when the story was written." Shoehorned into monotonous rows of small panels, the art battles for real estate with both dialogue balloons and boxed present-tense descriptions of what's going on (the pictures themselves being rarely self-explanatory). Seven pages of closing matter cover topics from Defoe's checkered career to stage and film versions of his masterpiece—and even feature an index for the convenience of assignment-driven readers.
At best, a poor substitute for Cliffs Notes and like slacker fare.(Graphic novel. 11-14)