Audiobook11 hours
Robinson Crusoe
Written by Daniel Defoe
Narrated by Francisco Lesmes
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
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About this audiobook
La vida y extrañas y sorprendentes aventuras de Robinson Crusoe, publicada en 1719, no es solo uno de los clásicos más leídos de todos los tiempos, sino que, en rigor, se trata de la primera de las grandes novelas inglesas, un texto fundacional. La historia es de todos conocida: Robinson Crusoe naufraga y acaba, solo, en una isla desierta. Poco a poco descubrirá que no está tan solo en la isla, habitada también por los caníbales. Con los restos de su barco, construirá una cabaña y una balsa. Salvará de los caníbales a un nativo, Viernes, que se convertirá en su fiel escudero. Además de una novela de aventuras, llena de inolvidables personajes, Robinson Crusoe es una de las primeras reflexiones narrativas sobre la soledad, la sociedad y las relaciones humanas.
Author
Daniel Defoe
Daniel Defoe was born at the beginning of a period of history known as the English Restoration, so-named because it was when King Charles II restored the monarchy to England following the English Civil War and the brief dictatorship of Oliver Cromwell. Defoe’s contemporaries included Isaac Newton and Samuel Pepys.
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Reviews for Robinson Crusoe
Rating: 3.565936983529098 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
3,746 ratings99 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5One of the best young adult books ever written. Deserted islands and shipwrecks started with Dafoe.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5My childhood library included an abridged version of Robinson Crusoe. It was one of my favorites, and I read it several times. When this unabridged version arrived from the Easton Press, I happily settled in to enjoy it again. I don't know what changed - my level of understanding, or the additional material not included in the version I had previously read - but I found the religious material to be slow going.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5It's a classic; how could I not give it 5 stars. I was delighted to discover how very readable the book is despite the language of early 1700s. Also surprised that the two main themes of the book are mechanical and spiritual. Mechanical, in the sense that there is a lot of practical detail about how Crusoe creates a living from the bits and pieces he rescues from the wrecked ship. And spiritual, in his struggles to come to terms with life alone (until near the end) on an island (not desert, btw) and how considers his relationship with God under the circumstances. Doubtless one of today's editors would have asked for a rewrite to reduce the book in half, but the rambling detail is part of its classic charm. Read slowly and it's easy to be with Crusoe for a LONG time.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5This book is very very slow. It is classic, but the type of classic that is only for a few excited readers that are not afraid of a long winter evenings with reading about Robinson's struggling on the sunny (or rainy) island.. Good luck to all brave readers.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5A wayward young man ignores the advice of his father and sets out to sea for fortune and adventure. He is involved in storms, pirate attacks and other misfortune, even spending some small time as a slave. Still he ignore these and persists in putting to sea one last time. After a shipwreck, he awakes on a deserted island all alone. He is the only man to have escaped with his life. Keeping his wits about him, he lives of the land for decades until he is finally released from this prison. During his stay, he examines himself and comes to a number of religious and spiritual realizations. He becomes a fervent Christian and learns to thank God in all circumstances.Sorry, but this book was tedious. It reads like a friend describing a movie they saw in painful detail. The text was dry and beggared belief. Why are there so many goats on this island? He can make even a large store of gunpowder last for 30+ years? I don't buy it.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5I don't think I've ever disliked a book more in my life.
Robinson Crusoe is basically the literary equivalent of stale bread. IT'S SO DAMN DULL, and PAAAINFULLY BORING (at least stale bread still has some nutritional value). I hated it. I hated it with the fiery passion of a thousand suns.
I never want to hear of this book ever again. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Zeer onderhoudend, zelfs na 3 eeuwen. Verrassende spirituele link: vergelijking met Job (beschouwingen over de voorzienigheid). Uniek thema: de nobele wilde, zelfs de kannibalen.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Unreadable prose (37 semicolons in a single sentence!) and a self-satisfied narrator make for a very unlikeable book. Defoe was a sexist, racist, colonialist pig, and this book reflects little more than his own crazed view of the world. It's a useful historical document, of course.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5One of my favorite classics as a child - I suppose because I felt so isolated back then. Defoe shows us that we are all victims of a shipwreck - stranded in the middle of the ocean called life. Faced with the struggle of Man against Nature, most of us would not cope as well as Defoe's hero.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5I don't remember reading this book, though it's obvious I have -- the spine is bent, and I'm the only one who's ever owned it. It obviously left no impression on me. It might be something I'd pick up in the future and try again.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Excelente novela. Viví con Robinson sus experiencias. La recomiendo a cualquier lector.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The story begins with the universal quest: the young man in Britain, torn between his safe home and his hunger for adventure, breaks away from his loving father and sails away into the unknown. After a series of harrowing escapes, he's shipwrecked on a desert island. His lively first-person account shows how his intelligence and education help him survive for many years, and how he uses technology, including guns and tools salvaged from the ship. He sets up home, reads the Bible, finds a parrot as a pet, and even devises a calendar to keep track of time. Then one day he finds a human footprint: "Was it someone who could save me and take me back to civilization? Or was it a savage who landed here?" When some "savages" arrive in several canoes, he uses his guns to get rid of them, and he rescues one of their captives, a handsome fellow with very dark skin. Delighted to have a companion at last, Crusoe names the newcomer Friday (since Crusoe found him on Friday).
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A wonderfully entertaining story. Much darker and adult than modern Hollywood and politically correct society would have us think. This is a great story and sadly one that is rarely seen in school libraries anymore. It seems to have fallen into that “offensive to some” niche. Loneliness, doubt, self-discovery and the desire to understand why our stars align the way they do and in what manner we should…or should not accept their formation. Defoe comes across with insight and brilliance to tell us the story of Mr. Robinson Crusoe, a young man who appears to have more bad luck than good. Stranded on an island for nearly three decades our protagonist suffers, lives and learns and still has the uncanny ability to be human.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5A man with wanderlust encounters a series of escalating misfortunes.1/4 (Bad).I gave up after 40 pages. I haven't even gotten to the really racist stuff yet (I suspect), but already the attitude towards slavery is too much. The style is readable but uniformly void of personality, and it's pretty clear how the story is going to unfold, so I'm confident that I'm not missing anything.(Aug. 2022)
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5There are a handful of novels that fascinated me in my early days of reading. This is one of them - I remember being mesmerized by the events of Robinson's life as narrated by Defoe. His creation of a new world on the island where he lived for years. The amazing feeling when he realized there was another person on the island and his ingenuity in developing a new life for himself. I think it was the first adventure book that I ever read and it spurred my interest in reading true tales of adventure ever since,
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5definately a book of it's time (white englishman is a higher moral ethical and valuable animal than both black men and the spanish/portuguese), but interesting to read nevertheless
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I read it the first time when I was a kid but somehow I fail to have a nostalgic feelings for it. This is a story of an extremely lucky restless young (at the start of his adventures) man who skips on his family, gets enslaved, escapes, immediately enslaves another person, sets up a plantation, buys some slaves, and only crashes on a deserted island because he sets sail to catch some slaves in Africa because they're too expensive on the free market. Gets stranded on this island, goes crazy, finds religion and belief in god's providence that is working for him through his good luck. Not that he's reformed, the first words he teaches to a native is "Friday" (native's new name, presumably he already had one) and "master" (his owner's name). Robinson grows wise over the years and states that given the chance to make the choice again he wouldn't have sailed for slaves again - he would just buy on the open market (surprise!) as this turned out to be a false economy. I know the book is old and I'm picking holes in century old morality but to be honest it's not that gripping. Lots of theological arguments and not that much "surviving".
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I'M FR--FINISHED!!!!! Seriously, that book is a lot to swim through. I actually really liked Robinson's documenting of how he MacGyvered his dwelling and food and whatnot, which made me think Andy Weir had been inspired by Defoe when writing The Martian. But be not fooled, there is much else to slog through. I am happy to send this book off to the Goodwill in the sky.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5My absolute favourite as a child
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Read another copy as a child - loved it - played games for a year based on this shipwrecked, lonely chap & Man Friday (younger sister in reality): Defoe's story is a timeless classic of imagination mixed with the reality of a seafaring mishap all too familiar to the era - amazingly his first novel when aged 60, & a masterpiece of its kind. Still love its vivid ruggedness, today.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This was a classic that I'd missed reading for over five decades but determined to attempt this year. It was an enjoyable read, believable, and kept my interest throughout the tale.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The legend of Robinson Crusoe and his Man Friday are elaborated in the novel and one can understand the appeal. The audiobook is also nicely done.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5To say I hated this book is probably the understatement of the century. In fact, I'm only halfway through the book after six years! I just can't seem to bring myself to buckle down and finish it mainly because the main character is a whiny pompous ass who is just plain dislikeable. I should probably donate this book, but there is still this little part of me that insists on finishing it, although that will most likely never happen.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5When I started this book, I was expecting a story about survival. I expected to hear about wild adventures and man vs. nature. I got a little of that. But, mostly I got a whiny narrator who complained bitterly about how lonely he was and how he wanted a companion. Turns out, he really just wanted a servant. I couldn't get into the story at all, I didn't like the main character (not even enough to feel a little sorry for him) and I really wasn't impressed by the ending. This was a slight disappointment for me.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I heard a lot of negative things about the story of Robinson Crusoe, so when I decided to pick up the book I had my doubts. I have to say, I found the book engaging and the story thoroughly interesting. I loved everything about the book right up until the ending. I felt as though Defoe rushed the end and took away everything we enjoyed from the Robinson's island adventure.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I think if someone cleared this of about 95% of the religious/"moral" drivel, it would be a decent story. As it is, much of it is bogged down by his droning on about that. But the story itself was fairly interesting. Not really recommended unless you're simply a fan of the old classics, and/or like having that sort of thing shoved endlessly down your throat.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5I have vague memories of reading a Classics Illustrated or other adapted version of this as a child. Whatever version that was, it was more entertaining. Beyond that value, this is one of the best examples I've encountered of what criticism of the canon is all about, viz., having a dismissive, patronizing attitude of anything not English or reflective of Defoe's values.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Sure, it's not for everyone, but what book is? I've read it many times. It's a great book, especially after a tough week or month surrounded by traffic, computers, and smog. Then I just want to be Robinson on my own private island, building, inventing, and slowly going happily mad!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Robinson Crusoe starts off whiney. And moany. And oh-woe-is-me, and why did I do that?
This is spoiler-ish.
Then he spends 20-odd years alone on a not-desert island. He learns to be alone--except for pets, and a parrot who he teaches to talk, and God. Because of course he finds God and starts studying the bible. It was all downhill from here.
From whiney guy he becomes the King. Because of course a native man will be his servant! And of course his servan'ts father and the random Spanish guy will serve him too! And then he becomes the Governor, because of course those who survive a mutiny on their ship will want Robinson to be their boss! And hey, he'll just eave the Spanish behind!
I was going to recommend this for a friend's 5th grade daughter--she reads like crazy, and would love the way he builds his life on the island. But then the servant bossy governor bits come in. Meh. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5An ebook from the Guttenberg project. I haven't taken to ebooks but the Gutenberg project is certainly a good way of catching up on old classics. And this certainly is a classic. But not quite the tale of adventure I had expected. The adventure is certainly there but this is really a philosophy book along the lines of Emmerson and Thoreau. Mr Crusoe spends much of his time alone musing and philosophising. Given that he was living quite well and had no company that is no surprise. But then that is Defoe's structure. Find a situation in which to put a character and then let him develop, unhindered, a philosophy of life. Crusoe is, of course, of his time and of his culture so his philosophising is in the nature of a debate with himself on aspects of christianity. It is appealing in that his world view is that of an optimist. His theme tune and motto for life would be 'Always look on the bright side of life.'