Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–1894) is a classic author whose works are in the public domain.

Stevenson's adventure crackles with betrayal, buried treasure, and a cast of morally ambiguous pirates and gentlemen whose motivations shift like sand, proving that the real danger isn't the journey but the people on the ship. Jim Hawkins must navigate between boyish enthusiasm and bitter disillusionment, growing older with every page.

A respectable doctor's experiments unleash his violent alter ego, a novella so psychologically prescient it feels like a case study in dissociation rather than gothic fantasy. Stevenson's prose economy and the horror of recognizing ourselves in a monster's freedom make this endlessly disturbing and quotable.

A young man kidnapped into servitude is thrust into Highland rebellion and survival, navigating loyalty and identity in prose that crackles with danger and landscape. Stevenson braids historical intrigue, adventure, and genuine emotional stakes into a coming-of-age narrative where the stakes feel genuinely mortal.