55 pages • 1 hour read
Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe (1719)
Robinson Crusoe is French writer Daniel Defoe’s debut novel, first published in 1719. Structured as a journal, the travelogue chronicles Crusoe’s experiences as a seaman and his twenty-eight years cast away on an uninhabited island near Trinidad, where Caribbean cannibals kill and eat prisoners.
The Swiss Family Robinson by Johann David Wyss (1812)
The Swiss Family Robinson is a fiction novel published in 1812 by Swiss author Johann Wyss. It chronicles the adventures of a family of Swiss immigrants shipwrecked in the East Indies. According to the Afterword of the 2014 Townsend edition, the story was conceived by Wyss, a Swiss minister, as an entertaining life lesson for his four sons, which he told them orally before eventually writing it down.
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne (1872)
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea is a science fiction adventure novel by French author Jules Verne. Daughter of the Deep heavily references this novel and its characters.
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By Rick Riordan