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Robinson Crusoe
Robinson Crusoe
Robinson Crusoe
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Robinson Crusoe

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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Have you ever wondered what it would be like to live on a deserted island after a shipwreck for 28 years? In this book, you will discover the vicissitudes that had to occur in order to survive after so many years of apparent solitude. This first novel by Daniel Defoe appears to resume the adventures of the Scottish sailor Alexander Selkirk, who was abandoned on an island off the cost of Chile. Robinson Crusoe is a classic written in the eighteenth century that takes you into a universe full of adventure.

Te has preguntado cÓmo serÍa vivir 28 aÑos recluido en una isla que parece desierta luego de un naufragio. En este libro descubrirÁs las vicisitudes que tuvo que pasar su protagonista para sobrevivir luego de tantos aÑos de aparente soledad, mientras establecÍa nuevas relaciones con los aborÍgenes de su morada imprevista. Esta primera novela de Daniel Defoe parece retomar las aventuras del marinero escocÉs Alexander Selkirk, quien fuera abandonado en una de las islas ubicadas frente a las costas chilenas. Robinson Crusoe es un clÁsico escrito en el siglo xviii con el que te adentrarÁs en un universo lleno de aventuras.
LanguageEspañol
Release dateJun 4, 2020
ISBN9786074525915
Author

Daniel Defoe

Daniel Defoe was born at the beginning of a period of history known as the English Restoration, so-named because it was when King Charles II restored the monarchy to England following the English Civil War and the brief dictatorship of Oliver Cromwell. Defoe’s contemporaries included Isaac Newton and Samuel Pepys.

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Rating: 3.5658599339150014 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

3,553 ratings118 reviews

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  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    A man with wanderlust encounters a series of escalating misfortunes.1/4 (Bad).I gave up after 40 pages. I haven't even gotten to the really racist stuff yet (I suspect), but already the attitude towards slavery is too much. The style is readable but uniformly void of personality, and it's pretty clear how the story is going to unfold, so I'm confident that I'm not missing anything.(Aug. 2022)
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is a tale of redemption and a man learning to become thankful under the most trying of circumstance. After not heeding the advice of his father or other warning, Robinson Crusoe is stranded on a deserted Island. After struggles in setting up a home, he becomes violently ill and for the first time calls out to God for help. It is form this point that Crusoe realizes that while he may be stranded that the others have gone to their grave. He also realized that God is a God of grace, and that is while he is still alive. Later as he encounters Friday he realized that one of his primary purposes is to spread the gospel to Friday. As he teaches Friday his own faith continues to grow and become deeper. The inner struggles are what make the tale and have made it a favorite among many such as Teddy Roosevelt and John Adams. While I am not in the same category as these men, it certainly remains a favorite of mine through many years.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This pillar of Western literature, considered by many to be the first English novel, left me ambivalent and uncomfortable. Its antiquated mores clash with modern perspective, but not just because of quaint antiquity: Defoe's Puritanical self-assuredness and cultural ignorance (resulting in subjugation) seem ominous in light of present-day conflicts.Is it a fun read? Sure, most of the time. Defoe's meticulous discussions of castaway lifestyle are captivating, if telescoped (a few paragraphs often represent years of island isolation for Crusoe). But because this is a masterful work, and does carry with it a serious message, passages about literal survival are interrupted by multi-page religious epiphanies as Crusoe faces his eternal survival. Crusoe's is a colonial white man's world. There is not a single real female character in the entire story. Anyone not European is a savage, meant for enslavement. Defoe's proud intolerance is not uncommon for the time, but paralleled with his relatively unsmiling Puritan tenets, it can feel downright grim. What is left unanswered for me is whether Defoe was aware of this hubris, whether it's a trick on the reader that Crusoe is so blithely superior, that I'm the fool for not understanding that he was winking the whole time.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This story is very terrific!!!I cannot imagine that I live alone in island for many years.If I were him, I would want to die because of terror, loneliness, andanxiety.I was moved by friendship between them.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Robinson Crusoe is claimed to be the first novel written in English, published in 1719, and is a fictional autobiography of Crusoe who is from an average family in England at that time, and spends 28 years stranded on a remote desert island.I found this book really dragged, & it is quite repetitive. Crusoe never really has any exciting adventures until way into the book. For the first quarter or so of the book it is mostly an account of daily life and the difficulties of making ink and paper, learning to make pottery & raising goats etc. It gets some what better when Crusoe rescues Man Friday from some cannibals and their relationship is interesting and compelling. Crusoe is forced to be open minded because he has no one else around except his parrot. He is able to understand the dignity of Friday and look upon him eventually as an equal in some ways although still a servant. Crusoe teaches Friday English & converts him to Christianity. I liked the fact that it questions our relationship with those we feel are beneath us in whatever way.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Oh my gosh this book was terrible! I wish I had of looked further into it before actually getting and reading this book. I gave it two stars because it was something I had heard about before and someone thought well enough to make a movie of it. I'm glad to be able to say that yes I've ready Robinson Crusoe but it's not a book I would ever recommend to anyone. The last 1/4 of the book was pretty good with a disappointing ending. The first 3/4 of the book though seemed like Defoe just wanted to increase the length of his book and many times I thought I was re-reading a page simple because there was so much redundancy in the book. It took me two weeks to read this book when I finished one about 100 pages longer in about 4 days, I just found this book put me to sleep and I couldn't concentrate on it at all. Finally I didn't care much for how it was written. When speakers in a conversation changed the only way you could tell was by the apostrophes. Normally where there is a line break there was none, this confused me many times with the dialogs. This may have just been my version of the book though
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I had this book suggested to me by someone when I was very young and it did not interest me at the time. Later I had it assigned in a literature class and I never looked at it then either.I saw several of the movies and they were just somewhat romantic adventures that were pleasant enough. But then I decided to read it when I was about 27 and going to junior college in Oakland California after living for many years on a social security check that was controlled by my conniving and cruel sister and I got something out of it.I really appreciate the way Defoe shows the steady improvement in the life of Crusoe. I feel like I have adapted some of that approach to my own life and have made improvements in my circumstances from a particularly meager position and have learned how to be more comfortable in my poverty and therefore less stressed and at less risk for being put in an abusive situation.I have not felt the need to read it more than once to have incorporated its lessons into my own life and have tried to recommend it to some other dysfunctionals I have known but have made no converts that I know of.In an introduction that I read of it there was much commentary on how it has been one of those books condemned to the nursery which should not have been. I think I may have read it at the right time for me.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    So first off I should say that I skimmed the last 150 pages of Robinson Crusoe. I enjoyed the part about him stranded on the island and learning to survive. I found all of the travels afterwards tedious and boring. I've often heard that saying that the more you travel the more you notice how alike people are rather than their differences. Not so for Crusoe. In the beginning he seems pretty accepting of everyone, then as he turns to religion he spreads the word of God, but by the end he is attempting to burn towns of "savages" and "heathens" and destroy their idols. Also, one more annoyance in this book was the use of the word viz. over and over again.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book blew me away! I was amazed how relevant it was to present time. It was not dusty/stuffy at all. I guess I was expecting Swiss Family Robinson or something. Instead I got this wonderful story of a man wrestling with his faith. Way.Cool.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I just reread this book, and it is amazing to me that it is as relevant today as it was when it was written in the late 1600's! I think sometimes people are expecting this to be an adventure story, but truly it is the theme "man vs. himself." Robinson Crusoe has to come to grips with the fact that his choices got him to the point he was in life, good or bad. Loved it.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Although tedious at times, I found this book to be a captivating adventure. With allowances made for the time period the book was written, this book is a rather straighforward and intriguing adventure. It does get repetitive at times and bogs down with the detail of the drudgery of Crusoe's solitary life on the island, but perhaps that just give's one a sense of how monotonous and slowly life would pass if one were walking in Robinson Crusoe's shoes.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Read this, expecting to know the story, since it is a tale told all over the world. Was happily surprised to feel the pace of Crusoe's routines, and all the details of everyday life only made the story more believable. Wonderful read. Read Robert P. Marzec's "Enclosure, Colonization, and the Robinson Crusoe syndrome" parallel with Defoe's book - very interesting analysis. Text published in "boundary", 2:29:2, 2002 (Duke Uni. Press).
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    while pursuing my MA in English Lit at the University of Central Florida in 1988-90, they told me the first novel was Pamela by Sterne, 1749. I beleive this 1724 book by DeFoe was the first novel.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I remember reading this as a young teenager, and I adored it. Defoe's story of a man being shipwrecked and washing ashore on a desert island could have been horrible, but it was instead inspiring. Crusoe somehow found everything he needed to build a successful and fulfilling life, and he even ended up with a friend in a native he called Friday. But re-reading it, in the unabridged version, as an adult resulted in a quite different opinion. The original version was slow, and the character's ability to locate building materials, excessive amounts of food, and in the end build his own little compound complete with an archaic booby-trap/alarm system seemed a little too convenient. You can imagine my horror in learning that the faithful friend he named Friday was viewed as nothing more than a savage & slave (and so treated), and I had to constantly remind myself that the tale was written in a time when slavery was a common and sadly acceptable practice. The religious aspect of the book was also hard to swallow, as page after page was written to force-feed the reader undigestible amounts of the era's church-centric lifestyle and beliefs. I suspect my inability to agree with the religious statements that filled the story was based largely in the way the character's faith seemed an excuse for the sub-human treatment of Friday. While I would never recommend the original text to a child (or for that matter anyone who doesn't believe in human rights and equality), the editions specifically tailored to children are wonderful. Having said that, I still recommend the unabridged text for those looking for a view of the world as it once was and a story about one man's refusal to give up in the face of incredible loss and desolation.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I've loved this story since my teens. The illustrations by Fritz Kredel are nice full-color plates.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book to me was both an epic adventure and a deeper look into the soul of an individual. It had both the survivalist type adventure, as well as the introspection of someone who finds themselves in an unimaginable situation. At first he refuses to believe in what is happening, then he moves into the realization that it is inevitable, then he adjusts again and can't concieve of the possibility of the change he has been dreaming of.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This has a lot going for it: adventure, creativity, plus it's one of the first books of fiction in English. There is a downside though, in that the English can be a bit difficult to parse.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A brilliant book that set the standard for the Desert Island Genre. It's a classic, and a great read for both adults and children, much better than endless Enid Blyton I read at that age.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Adventure n'that. With parrots and goats. A really good read.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    he waited 20-something years to meet Friday. the first teo chapters were packed with action and then he was alone on his island. turns out that u need at least two people in a story and to create conflict so that part was just slow for me to read. the last three chapters are packed again with lots of actions and people on the island.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    2008, Blackstone Audiobooks, Read by John LeeI’ve been wanting to read this classic, first published in 1719, for some time. It is in [1001 Books] and it is widely acknowledged at the first English novel. Defoe presents readers with a fascinating scenario: the prolonged and intense solitude of Robinson Crusoe, shipwrecked on a deserted island. Crusoe’s grappling with his new existence is captivating. First, of course, he needs to learn how he will feed himself; but in time he develops a relationship with the natural world of the island which allows him not only to survive but to fashion a quite comfortable, if solitary, existence. And he develops a personal connection to God that is both rich and rewarding, where before his mishap, he had none. Crusoe’s encounters with the native islanders date the publication in terms of master/slave relations with the savages – and and I found it difficult not to squirm, reading from my twenty-first century chair (what’s more, I could not but notice that such relations are left absent from the most recent re-telling of Robinson Crusoe, the 2000 film Castaway.Good read. Not one I will revisit, but one that is certainly worthwhile.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The storyline of this novel is intriguing enough, but since the medium was so new, Defoe's writing leaves much to be desires. Crusoe's constant listing and mood swings are hard to get through after a while.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This is one of those books that is normally read in childhood that I just never got around to, that being said, I'm not sorry I skipped it as a child. I can't believe this book is considered a children's classic. It promotes slavery as a way of life, discusses lifestyles of cannibals, and overly promotes religion. I could over look all of those things given that the book was written in 1719, and would have been common conceptions, but seriously, this is the stuff of my childhood nightmares.

    The author has Crusoe killing cats to keep the population down, drowning kittens, enslaving a man that he was obliged to save. It wont give me nightmares... But I can't say I've enjoyed this book.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    “It is never too late to be wise.” No doubt like many others I knew this story from its techni-colour reincarnations but had actually never read the original so had no idea how Robinson Crusoe got to the island or even off it. As such felt that it was time that I put that right even if it was tough to get those versions out of my mind.This book was originally published nearly 300 years ago in 1719 and is regarded as one of the first English novels, its even based on a true story but unfortunately for me it is showing the signs of age.The book explores many issues including religion and colonialism and it was interesting that the first word that Crusoe teaches Friday is 'master' but the book is so top heavy with all the action being either at the beginning or the very end with little happening in between and despite living on the island for over 20 years on his own Crusoe never fully explored it which seems a bit of a stretch to put it mildly. It also seems amazing that the island was not visited by another human being for 20+ years given the ending when it seemed to suddenly appear on the tourist must to list.On the whole I enjoyed the beginning and the end where it felt like a boy's own tale yet found the middle ponderous and disappointing which has affected my general opinion overall.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    In my eyes the only thing remarkable about this tale is the notion that it is purportedly one of the first English novels. It is an adventure story set in the 1600s about Englishman Robinson Crusoe's experiences as a sailor and his survival alone on an uninhabited island after surviving a ship wreck. While I found portions of the story captivating, too much of it is burdened with excrutiatingly detailed passages of Crusoe's life on the island. I learned some practical things about survival, and I found notable the themes of self preservation, human perseverence, and resourcefulness. It would be unfair to condemn the book too harshly for being a product of its time, which includes all the nastiness of European imperialism and the arrogance and prejudices that came with it, but I found the attitude toward the "savages" (oh, that would be the natives of South America) difficult to suffer and remain on the side of the story's protagonist. Defoe would have best served the novel had he omitted the detailed chapters that chronicled Crusoe's return journey through the Continent and instead concluded simply with his return to England.Overall the novel is inconsistent in its pace and bores the reader with trivialities. The notion that Crusoe found a newfound faith in God on the island and proceeded directly thereafter to so gracelessly enslave a native isn't so much surprising as it is inadvertantly satirical.Three stars only because of the historical significance of this, one of the first, novels in the English language. Otherwise, I would have given it two stars.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Its account of a man's industry and occasionally outright boredom in the face of trying circumstances is inspiring and classic.Honestly, if you dig too deep, there are a lot of uncomfortable themes about race, gender, and religion that might tarnish any fond childhood memories you have (I recommend the excellent essay "Robinson Crusoe and the Ethnic Sidekick").To summarize, it's about a man who uses and possesses everything and everyone he sees. You can draw a lot of conclusions about sexism, white supremacy, and capitalism and you really wouldn't be too far off base.While it's good to keep this in mind, you should also keep in mind that it's over three hundred years old. Not that this makes any of the enclosed sentiments any less awful, but the prevailing ideas of the time should at least be taken into account.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5


    Fascinating book both for its detailed subject matter and its insight into the mindset and culture of the late 17th and early 18th centuries.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Timeless classic!
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    This should have been a book I really liked, but the overbearing narrative voice ruined it. And I say this as someone who has been reading and enjoying a lot of books with opinionated narrators lately.

    Generally, when I read a novel I expect it to have a degree of personal growth (unless a lack of growth is the point of the story) and narrative tension. And this story *should* have had both of those. Certainly, the protagonist finds God and humility over the course of the novel, but the narration spends the entire book lamenting that he didn't trust to providence, etc., etc. (at length, every few pages, so you don't miss it...) that the personality he had at the beginning is totally absent, overridden by who he becomes by the end. And the way it's written it just seams so *easy* for him to survive--certainly, he must have had problems, but those are mostly glossed over, he has a whole ship full of stuff, and he routinely points out how something he did early on would be useful later, so when the problem does come up you already know it's solved.

    And if the protagonist barely has a personality, no one else has any personality at all. And you might think, well, yeah, he spends the whole book alone on an island--but no! Quite a bit of the book isn't on the island, or otherwise there are other people around. But they just waft on and off-stage with no real effect. Friday is more of a person than anyone else, but he's such a caricature that I feel like he hardly counts. Oh, and the narrator mentions that he got married and had three kids and his wife died, all in one sentence, and goes on with the narration like nothing remarkable happened, and did these people mean nothing to you?

    Ugh. And even though he keeps belaboring the religious lesson over and over, it isn't even a good sermon, because good rhetoric has roots in good story and personal development.

    Anyway, I think what I'm saying here is you'd be better off spending your time reading a wilderness survival manual while singing Amazing Grace over and over again.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    What I learned from this book is that not every book that is called a classic earns that title.If this hadn't been on my Feb bookshelf then I wouldn't have finished it.

    I know this is regarded as the first english language novel but that doesn't excuse the fact that it is badly written.

    Robinson Crusoe is a complete and utter idiot, he never learns from his mistakes and never takes advice from anybody. Maybe it's just me but if the very first ship you are on sinks perhaps you should take it as a sign, but not him off he goes again and ends up as a slave. He escapes and is rescued by a too good to be true captain and makes a good life for himself in Brazil, but even then that is not enough. So when some of his friends decide they want more slaves he is selected to make the trip to buy them and of course being Robinson the ship is struck by a hurricane while in the Carribean. Sounds bad so far doesn't it and it only gets worse.

    I know that I shouldn't complain about the attitude towards slavery in the book as it was a different time period and it is historically accurate but I just found it really hard to stomach, in fact it made me wish that Friday had been a cannibal.

    I have read this book before but I was about ten and you don't really pick up on the racism and all the other things that are wrong with this book at that age. Then you just think about the adventure of being on a desert island. The reason I read this again is because a few weeks ago I was having dinner with my Mum and she was watching what I thought was I very bad adaptation. Turns out it was the source material that was the problem and based on that there was no way you could ever make a good version.

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Robinson Crusoe - Daniel Defoe

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