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Daniel Defoe

Bio: (1660?-1731) The son of a London butcher and educated at a Dissenters' academy, Daniel Defoe was typical of the new kind of man reaching prominence in England in the 18th century--self-reliant, industrious, possessing a strong notion of personal and moral responsibility. Although intended for the Presbyterian ministry, he had by 1683 set himself up as a merchant dealing in many different commodities. In spite of his own considerable savings and his wife's dowry, Defoe went bankrupt in 1692. Although he paid his creditors, he was never entirely free from debt again. Defoe's first important publication was An Essay upon Projects (1698), but it was not until the poem The True-born Englishman (1701), a defense of William III from his attackers, that he received any real fame. An ill-timed satire early in Queen Anne's reign, The Shortest Way with Dissenters (1702), an ironic defense of High Church animosity against nonconformists, resulted in Defoe's being imprisoned. He was rescued by Robert Harley and subsequently served the statesman as a political agent. Defoe has been called the father of modern journalism; during his lifetime he was associated with 26 periodicals. From 1704 to 1713 he published and wrote a Review, a miscellaneous journal concerned with the affairs of Europe; this was an incredibly ambitious undertaking for one man.

He was nearly sixty when he turned to writing novels. In 1719 he published his famous Life and Strange Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, followed by two less engrossing sequels. Based in part on the experiences of Alexander Selkirk, Robinson Crusoe describes the daily life of a man marooned on a desert island. Although there are exciting episodes in the novel--Crusoe rescuing his man Friday from cannibals--its main interest derives from the way in which Crusoe overcomes the extraordinary difficulties of life on the island while preserving his human integrity. Robinson Crusoe is considered by some critics to be the first true novel in English.



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1 Robinson Crusoe
by Daniel Defoe
  Based on a real-life incident, Robinson Crusoe tells the story of a young man who yearns to escape the mundane world and set sail for a life of adventure in faraway places. Defying his father's wishes he leaves on board a ship, then finds himself marooned on a tropical island where he wrestles with his fate and ponders the nature of God and man. The world has gotten smaller since Defoe penned his novel, but the human imagination still looms large. So even in today's world of space exploration, t... more info>> 1719

Words: 120814 - Reading Time: 345-483 min.
Category: Classic Literature
19 Reader Ratings:
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2 Moll Flanders
by Daniel Defoe
  Moll Flanders details the life of the irresistible Moll and her struggles through poverty and sin in search of property and power. Born in Newgate Prison to a picaresque mother, Moll propels herself through marriages, periods of success and destitution, and a trip to the New World and back, only to return to the place of her birth as a popular prostitute and brilliant thief. The story of Moll Flanders vividly illustrates Defoe's themes of social mobility and predestination, sin, redemption and r... more info>> 1722

Words: 138150 - Reading Time: 394-552 min.
Category: Classic Literature
6 Reader Ratings:
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3 Essay Upon Projects
by Daniel Defoe
  Defoe began working on the series of radical proposals to improve England in about 1692 when he had just gotten out of prison and was hiding from authorities and creditors; by the time he had finished and published them in 1697, he had also righted himself publicly and financially. The collection represents new beginnings for him as a political and literary figure, new assertions of principles, new ventures on public terrain. It also is solidly within the tradition of the flurry of similar propo... more info>> 1697

Words: 50103 - Reading Time: 143-200 min.
Category: Classic Literature
2 Reader Ratings:
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4 The Further Adventures of Robinson Crusoe
by Daniel Defoe
  Daniel Defoe's faith-filled The Further Adventures of Robinson Crusoe finds Crusoe bored with his prosperity and consumed by an irresistible longing to return to the island he left many years before. Along with his trusty servant and companion, Friday, he embarks on a harrowing high-seas adventure that takes them to China, over the Russian steppes, and into Siberia. Readers will find themselves captivated by this sequel, which is every bit as engaging as the original. 1715

Words: 100168 - Reading Time: 286-400 min.
Category: Classic Literature
7 Reader Ratings:
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5 Everybody's Business is Nobody's Business
by Daniel Defoe
  A Proposal for Amendment of the same; as also for clearing the Streets of those Vermin called Shoe-Cleaners, and substituting in their stead many Thousands of industrious Poor, now ready to starve. With divers other Hints of great Use to the Public. Humbly submitted the Consideration of our Legislature, and the careful Perusal of all Masters and Mistresses of Families. Everybody's Business is Nobody's Business is a proverb so common in everybody's mouth, that I wonder nobody has yet thought it w... more info>> 1726

Words: 6993 - Reading Time: 19-27 min.
Category: Classic Literature
5 Reader Ratings:
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6 Of Captain Mission
by Daniel Defoe
  Of Captain Mission is the first chapter of Volume 2 of A General History of the Robberies and Murder of the Most Notorious Pyrates, first published in 1724. The book was an immediate bestseller, and an expanded edition with Volume 2 was published in 1726. Written when many of the pirates described were still roaming the sea, the stories included vivid descriptions of the famous rogues, Blackbeard, Captain Kidd, and Bartholomew Roberts, along with female pirates, Mary Read and Anne Bonny. In fact... more info>> 1726

Words: 16080 - Reading Time: 45-64 min.
Category: Classic Literature
3 Reader Ratings:
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7 The Consolidator
by Daniel Defoe
  By 1705 already an established and tempestuous pamphleteer and journalist, this is a wonderful example of Defoe's direct and inventive style. Acknowledging its debt to prior works by Godwin and Wilkins, The Consolidator uses 'the lunar world to satirize England's political and economic abuses and to anticipate scientific inventions' (Gibson). Although most critics are content to analyse it as a prototype Gulliveriad, it is also a fascinating document in itself. Most of the work is dedicated to l... more info>> 1705

Words: 64461 - Reading Time: 184-257 min.
Category: Classic Literature
2 Reader Ratings:
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8 Dickory Cronke
by Daniel Defoe
  A faithful and very surprising account how Dickory Cronke, a Tinner's son, in the County of Cornwall, was born Dumb, and continued so for Fifty-eight years; and how, some days before he died, he came to his Speech; with Memoirs of his Life, and the Manner of his Death. 1719

Words: 10150 - Reading Time: 29-40 min.
Category: Classic Literature
2 Reader Ratings:
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9 From London to Land's End
by Daniel Defoe
  An enchanting letter full of descriptions and traditions of the English countryside. 1724

Words: 35740 - Reading Time: 102-142 min.
Category: Classic Literature
3 Reader Ratings:
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10 Tour through the Eastern Counties of England
by Daniel Defoe
  I began my travels where I purpose to end them, viz., at the City of London, and therefore my account of the city itself will come last, that is to say, at the latter end of my southern progress; and as in the course of this journey I shall have many occasions to call it a circuit, if not a circle, so I chose to give it the title of circuits in the plural, because I do not pretend to have travelled it all in one journey, but in many, and some of them many times over; the better to inform myself ... more info>> 1722

Words: 39075 - Reading Time: 111-156 min.
Category: Classic Literature
4 Reader Ratings:
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