The Wrong Box (novel)

The Wrong Box  

First edition cover
Author(s) Robert Louis Stevenson
Lloyd Osbourne
Country Scotland
Language English
Genre(s) Black comedy
Publisher Longmans,Green & Co.
Publication date 1889
Media type Print (Hardback)
Pages 283
ISBN NA

The Wrong Box is a black comedy novel co-written by Robert Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne, first published in 1889. The story is about two brothers who are the last two surviving members of a tontine.

The book is notable for being the first of three novels that Stevenson co-wrote with Osbourne, who was his stepson. The others were The Wrecker (1892) and The Ebb-Tide (1894). Osbourne wrote the first draft of the novel late in 1887 (then called The Finsbury Tontine), Stevenson revised it in 1888 (then called A Game of Bluff) and again in 1889 when it was finally called The Wrong Box.

Contents

Characters

Literary significance and reception

Rudyard Kipling, in a letter to his friend Edmonia Hill (dated September 17, 1889), praised the novel:

I have got R.L. Stevenson's In the Wrong Box and laughed over it dementedly when I read it. That man has only one lung but he makes you laugh with all your whole inside.

Adaptation

The Wrong Box was filmed in 1966 starring Michael Caine. The Robert Louis Stevenson website maintains a complete list of derivative works.[1]

References

  1. ^ Robert Louis Stevenson Derivative Works

External links