Reviews

The Beach of Falesa by Robert Louis Stevenson

kndllcr's review

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slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

2.0

has aged very poorly. 

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thomasawriter's review

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2.0

This wasn't my cup of tea. This was too... xenophoby. It's of it's time but the time was horrible with how they viewed foreigners as a society. I suppose the author was trying to get this message across but his prejudices still shine through somewhat. :') I had to read this for a university essay.

kay247's review

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2.0

After my third attempt, I finally finished this book. Sadly, I really didn’t enjoy it. The descriptions of the island were beautiful, but I just couldn’t connect with Stevenson’s characters or style.

lacywolfe's review

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2.0

This was the first work by Stevenson that I've ever read. It was a dark tale of British colonization. I think I'd like to try Treasure Island next.

readtoramble's review

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4.0

I don't usually read classics, and I haven't ever read a Robert Louis Stevenson book I don't think, I was really expecting it to be boring and to drag on, but I really did enjoy it. I had no problems understanding what was happening, the language wasn't ancient or too posh to know what was going on, I was really engrossed in it and read it super fast.
The story follows a man who goes to an island near Polynesia as a trader and the first night he married one of the island women and soon learns that he is tabooed. This is his quest to find out why and to reverse the curse.
I found it funny and although it is a colonialist book with a somewhat colonialist and imperialist stance, it was really enjoyable and it made me want to read a lot more of his books!

isiahreads's review

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adventurous mysterious slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

2.5

rachel271's review

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1.0

Absolutely no idea what was going on

jfaroy's review

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3.0

Since I’m apathetic to adventure, nature — sylvan, fertile, abundant — was the only pleasurable player in this novella, contrasting and balancing an abrasive narrator. Running from romanticism, Uma and the colonialist love story are cringingly romanticized into authenticity. In his shift to realism, RLS shows the devil, created in the image of man.


A loyal companion (and predecessor!) to Conrad’s Heart of Darkness.

whats_margaret_reading's review

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4.0

Adventure story purveyor turns to colonialism, miscegenation, and madness? Kind of awesome. The people in charge of the Art of the Novella series, as has been more throughly and insightfully criticized elsewhere, tend towards the obvious authors (Stevenson, H.G. Wells, basically authors who are famous and the public domain which limits the diversity somewhat) but some of the lesser known works of those same authors are absolutely fascinating. Instead of just some Treasure Island adventure writer, Stevenson demonstrates a darker and more sinister streak in this novella.

oldpondnewfrog's review against another edition

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2.0

I don't think I found the narrator a very sympathetic character. Just too much better than the natives. And he solved his problems too tidily. I did finish it though, so it was okay. I suppose that's why I almost never have a one-star review here: those are the books I don't finish.