Right after
reading few chapters of Kidnapped, I instantly saw the similarity with Treasure
Island. The strange thing is, I totally forgot at that time that Treasure
Island is also Robert Louis Stevenson’s adventure story! No wonder that those
two are so alike, although Kidnapped is much more than just an adventure story.
David
Balfour is a seventeen year Scottish lad that has just become an orphan. It was
at 1751, when Scotland suffered from the dispute between the Lowlander and
Highlander (Jacobites). His dead father left him a letter and instruction to be
brought to the house of Shaws, who appeared to be David’s uncle. Imagining that
he was having a situation there, Ebenezer Balfour treated him badly; he tried
to murder him but failed; then he conspired with a captain of a brig to kidnap
David and sell him as a slave. All was done so that David could never touch his
inheritance.
David was a
prisoner on board of Covenant, a brig
of the villain Captain Hoseason and his gang. He saw the injustice and even a
murder done by them. Fortunately, another ship wrecked, and a survived gentleman
was taken into Covenant. The gentleman was a Highlander and enemy of the
Campbell (King’s agent), called Alan Breck Stewart. Having overheard the
Captain and the crew’s plan to murder Alan, David made an alliance with Alan to
fight them back. Unfortunately the ship wrecked, and David, separated from
others, was washed ashore in the inhabited isle of Earraid, where he cast away
for several months, but then managed to return to the land.
Reunited
with Alan, David accidentally witnessed the murder of Colin Roy Campbell, and wrongly
accused. So now, Alan and David, having come from different clan (David is a
Lowlander) were now in the same ‘ship’. Through difficulties and dangers they
both fled. And through this journey and adventure, an intimate bound of
friendship was built upon David and Alan. The question is, how would it end,
considering that they were supposed to be enemies?
One most
interesting aspect of this adventure story is the historical setting and facts.
Many of the characters (especially those involved in the dispute of Lowlander
and Highlander) were really exist in the history of Scotland, including Alan Breck himself.
Through David’s eyes, Stevenson brought us to witness and learn one of Scottish
histories during the Jacobite rising. Another strong point that makes Kidnapped not an ordinary adventure
story, is the Scottish atmosphere that we’d find throughout the story. I was
having difficulties of understanding many Scottish idioms and dialect in the
first chapters, but along the way, I began to be familiar with it, and I think,
overall, the Scottish nuance has added a unique value to this book.
One thing
(and an important one, at least for me) that didn’t fit my expectation is the
ending. Adventure stories, just like mysteries, used to have a conclusive
ending. Anyway, adventures’ pace is set such that it will reach climax at the
end, and that—I believe—is the chief point of writing an adventure story.
Unfortunately, Stevenson did not provide that conclusive ending for Kidnapped.
I read elsewhere that there are two possibilities: 1) Perhaps Stevenson was
worried that his ending might contradict the history; or: 2) Kidnapped was planned to be followed by
a sequel; and thus the hanging ending was applied to curious the readers.
Whatever the
real reason, the ending is so dissatisfying and so abrupt that at first I was
suspicious that my ebook was corrupted or something. Well, it was clearly what
Stevenson has put is the real ending, and it forced me to take back a half star
from the rating I originally gave this book. Three and a half stars finally,
for Kidnapped, and I really wish it
has a better ending!....
~~~~~~~~
*I read ebook version from Gutenberg Project*
*This book is counted
as:*
4th book for Fun Year Event With Children Literature
7th book for Historical Fiction Challenge 2013
7th book for Back to the Classics 2013
54th book for The Classics Club Project
And he DID write a sequel, called Catriona! It's not as amazing as Kidnapped, but it has a girl, some love and a definite ending! So if you want some closure, you should read them together :)
ReplyDeleteYes, I just found out about Catriona when searching google for this review. I might read it one day! ;)
DeleteWahh kayaknya aku juga bakal lebih suka buku ini daripada treasure island deh, krna gk cuma melulu ttg adventure yang kamu bilang mba tpi ada hal lainnya :)
ReplyDeleteYup, Treasure Island lebih childish ya, kalo Kidnapped lebih ke Young Adult.
DeleteTrus buku ini belum ada yang terjemahin ya mba fan? Inggrisnya ringan gk menurut mba fanda? compare to buku lain seperti gatsby misalnya :)
DeleteSeingatku belum ada terjemahannya. Bahasanya sih biasa, bukan bahasa sastra, tp memang banyak istilah2 Scotland yg lumayan bikin bingung awalnya, tp lama2 jadi terbiasa. My suggestion, baca via e-reader aja, jadi ada dictionary-nya, tinggal klik aja.
Delete