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RLS:
At the World's End
STEPHEN SCOBIE
In RLS: At the
World’s End, award-winning Canadian poet Stephen Scobie
charts an imagined course through Stevenson’s writings and
travels. Scobie, himself a Scot living abroad, presents an extended
dialogue between his own, contemporary voice and a poetic image
of RLS: forever seeking a treasure island, forever longing to
return home, living and dying at the world’s end.
Robert Louis Stevenson
(1850-1894) was one of the most popular authors of the late 19th
century. He is known for such classic works as Treasure Island,
Kidnapped, A Child’s Garden of Verses and The Strange
Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde — but also for the
romantic tale of his tragically short life, from his childhood
in Scotland to his death in the South Seas.
Stephen Scobie is a
Canadian poet, critic, and scholar. Born in Carnoustie, Scotland,
Scobie relocated to Canada in 1965. He earned a PhD from the University
of British Columbia in Vancouver after which he taught at the
University of Alberta and at the University of Victoria, from
which he recently retired. Scobie is a founding editor of Longspoon
Press, an elected member of the Royal Society of Canada, and the
recipient of the 1980 Governor General’s Award for McAlmon’s
Chinese Opera (1980) and the 1986 Prix Gabrielle Roy for
Canadian Criticism. |
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