Young Jim Hawkins has no reason to suspect that Billy Bones, the pensioner who has taken up residence in his fathers inn, is anything other than an aging former mariner. But when violent altercations with visitors to the inn leave Billy on deaths doorstep, Jim discovers that they all are members of the crew of the notorious pirate Captain Flint, and that Billy has a map that shows the whereabouts of Flints buried treasure. . .
First serialized in a childrens magazine between 1881 and 1882 as a coming-of-age story for young readers, Treasure Island has transcended its time and intended audience. Robert Louis Stevensons novel forged the template for the tale of pirate adventure, and many of its dramatic elementsincluding buried treasure, treasure maps, and pirate oaths, among othershave become iconic parts of virtually every pirate adventure story written in its wake.