Robinson Crusoe

Robinson Crusoe

by Daniel Defoe, Virginia Woolf (Introduction)
Publisher: Modern Library
Reissue, ©2009, ISBN: 9780375757327
Trade Paperback, 384 pages
Price: $9.00

The text in this volume is explicitly modeled and carefully edited to be as close to the original edition as possible. It also includes a number of extras, including a biography of Daniel Defoe; a rather cynical but humorous introduction by author Virginia Woolf; a textual note; brief commentaries by Sir Walter Scott, Edgar Allen Poe, Samuel Johnson, and Virginia Woolf; and a reader's guide.True to the early versions, it does not include chapter breaks or illustrations. A good copy for studying, this is the one recommended by Memoria Press.

It's easy to miss the real meaning of Daniel Defoe's masterpiece, touted as it often is as the greatest adventure story of all time, the first modern novel, and possibly the first nonfiction novel. While the first two are true (the third is just wishful thinking), Defoe's novel of a castaway Englishman who learns to survive in the wild is one of the finest depictions of Christian redemption in all of literature.

First published in 1719, Robinson Crusoe was written when the novel was still in its infancy. It introduced many of the devices that came to dominate fictional narrative structures, including straightforward narration and fictional realism. In its first year, it went through four editions because it was so popular, and writers ever since have spoken of being influenced by the novel.

While all of those are admirable accomplishments, the real worth of Defoe's novel is spiritual. Crusoe begins in rebellion against his parents and God, but through faithful Bible reading and prayer in his solitude on the island, he becomes a Christian, thus illustrating the need for personal conviction (especially in a land where citizenship involved church membership).

But Crusoe soon realizes the need for Christian companionship and community, and it's not until he converts the island native Friday that he's truly satisfied and happy. The idea John Donne so succinctly expressed in his famous line, No man is an island, entire of itself, is beautifully expressed in the spiritual development of the novel's protagonist.

Defoe made no mistake, then, in landing his character on an island. It becomes a metaphor for the spiritual solitude each of us experiences before accepting the truth of Christ's Gospel. At the same time, it illustrates the conditions in which the Holy Spirit works—coming to us not in the craze and busy-ness of everyday life, but in the calm of reflection and through His Word.

Of course, this is also a fantastic adventure story, complete with shipwreck, survival, and battles. Yet, to ignore the Christian elements of this story is not to benefit from it the way Defoe intended. A devout Presbyterian Puritan, he wasn't just writing a fun story to thrill bored readers; he was honoring his God through one of the most well-respected works of art in the history of literature.

Did you find this review helpful?
Customer Reviews
Write a Review Click here to write a review
  A Story Written Before the 19th Century
Keagen White of Washougal, 8/29/2016
This is a story about a young man who runs away from home and becomes a sailor, a slave and a merchant, then shipwrecked on a deserted island. There he survives by living off the land and the remains of the wreck. Later he meets a runaway slave and a crazy trapper and eventually gets a ridde home. This is a extremely good book and very easy to read for being written in 1719. I recommend this book for every one, especially adventurous boys.