When we think of adventure we envision feats of derring-do, perilous journeys into the remote wilderness, swashbuckling deeds on the high seas, and survival in the face of impossible odds. Now, in a collection that challenges our very notion of adventure, Joseph Bristow brings together twenty-three riveting tales, penned by such masters as Rudyard Kipling, Robert Louis Stevenson, Bram Stoker, and Zane Gray, but with notable contributions from such unexpected sources as Margaret Atwood, Tim O'Brien, and Daphne Du Maurier.
Here readers will find bravery and boldness in settings that range from desert islands to the Java Sea, from war-torn Europe to deepest Africa, and from India to the Canadian wastes. Bristow offers many classic works of adventure, such as Edgar Allan Poe's
MS Found in a Bottle, Mark Twain's
ThePrivate History of a Campaign that Failed, and Joseph Conrad's
The Lagoon. Along side these, he also includes Margaret Atwood's offbeat
Death by Landscapeand Tim O'Brien's
On the Rainy River(where the adventure lies in dodging the draft as opposed to going to war).
An exhilarating collection of classic and contemporary tales,
The Oxford Book of Adventure Storiesis sure to amuse, intrigue, captivate, and challenge every lover of fiction.
Bristow is to be commended for his choice in intellectually stimulating stories. --
South Carolina HeraldJoseph Bristowis Senior Lecturer in English at the University of York. His previous books include
Empire Boys: Adventure Stories in a Man's World.