The Coral Island

by R. M. Ballantyne

Paperback, 2020

Status

Available

Call number

823.8

Publication

Independently published (2020), 196 pages

Description

In this adult edition of the children's classic, three English boys, shipwrecked on a deserted island, create an idyllic society despite typhoons, wild hogs, and hostile visitors. Then evil pirates kidnap one of the youths whose adventures continue among the South Sea Islands.

User reviews

LibraryThing member gmillar
I think this was Mr. Ballantyne' fourth book and his first foray into the Pacific. His previous books had been about Canada and the Hudson Bay Company's life style. This was my dad's favourite Ballantyne. I read it as a kid myself and liked it. I guess that it, and my dad's connection with it, got
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me interested in Ballantynes and started the collection. The three friends in this story turn up again in a later book, The Gorilla Hunters. Here they are shipwrecked on a ......coral island.
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LibraryThing member ctpress
An enjoyable boys adventure story set on some remote Island in the Pacific Ocean, where three teenagers are shipwrecked.

After some time of Robinson Crusoe-like experiences they are intangled in some nasty tribal wars and tries to rescue a young woman from being executed.

The latter part of the
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novel are dealing with some missionaries who try to convert the "heathens". There are some very gruesome and graphic detailed descriptions in the novel that surprised me a lot.

The moral of the story are not told in a subtle way - no doubt about the Christian and Victorian virtues that are being instilled in the young reader of that day.

Ballantyne wrote numerous novels of this kind, but Coral Island is one of his most famous.
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LibraryThing member Goldengrove
Great Boy's Own style adventure - the British lad wins out against all unpleasantness and low behaviour!
LibraryThing member AliceAnna
Would have been good had it not been for ridiculously long detailed descriptive entries and the whole beat-you-over-the-head Christian bent. Take out the more egregious examples of both and this would be a good boy's adventure story.
LibraryThing member BookWallah
Shipwrecks and Pirates and Cannibals, Oh My!

Young Adult adventure novel from 1857 set in the South Seas is a tad overwritten for today's reader but still a good yarn nonetheless. Natural history descriptions are surprisingly accurate given when it was written. Recommended for preteen boys whose
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mothers don't mind gruesome descriptions of cannibalistic practices.
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LibraryThing member Traveller1
A gift from my childhood, in fact I cannot recall the story in detail, but I remember I re-read this several times. Great fun. Nor this cover, a cover with an orange sky and the 3 lads.
LibraryThing member debnance
Another 1001 book read. Adventure. Action. Pirates. Cannibals. Murder. Treasure. Mystery. What more does a book need?
LibraryThing member Ma_Washigeri
Not really sure what I think. Picked up from a shelf of second hand books in a Pembrokeshire cafe. Last read from the library when I was 10 or 11. I loved the first half - almost a manual on how to survive on a coral island in the South Seas. Enjoyed the pirate interlude as a bit of a change.
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Loathed the last bit of cannibals and christians. However the language is delicious throughout.
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LibraryThing member Chris_El
A great boys book about a few boys shipwrecked on an island. Kind of a cross between Treasure Island and Robinson Crusoe.
LibraryThing member ChrisNewton
I must admit I got into this crazy mid-Victorian jingoistic evangelical boy's adventure story.
LibraryThing member Garrison0550
A great little adventure story. One that anyone who likes to read, should read. Ballantyne has many more worth reading - Martin Rattler, Sunk at Sea, The Young Fur Traders, and The Dog Crusoe and His Master, just to name a few.

LibraryThing member electrascaife
A member of the Boys Stranded on a Deserted Island genre, this one rolls along pretty well, although it gets surprisingly dark toward the end. Still, a fun-enough read.
LibraryThing member justmum
Very dated nontheless quite a good read
LibraryThing member themulhern
The earlier parts of this book are fun. Like his successor Robert Louis Stephenson, Ballantyne was very good at vivid descriptions of ocean, waves, islands, storms, vegetation, etc. The second half of the book is very different from the first; in the first, the boys are all alone on the island and
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cooperate with the utmost cheer in making a safe and comfortable life for themselves in spite of danger from animals and weather, in the second, they must cope with the outside world in the form of natives, pirates, and missionaries. Then they go home.

The whole book has an extremely simple and untheological Christian message: Christianity is good, belief is good and will help you. There are no fine questions of theology on which our hero, Ralph, must exercise his mind. This makes the book very different from the Narnia books, which are drenched in theological metaphor.

Some of the cover images are misleading; Jack, the eldest of the boys, is already 18 when they are shipwrecked, well-grown and strong. Only Peterkin, at 12 or 13, could be expected to look boyish. Nonetheless, much of the cover art makes all three look roughly 10 years old.
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LibraryThing member Ma_Washigeri
Not really sure what I think. Picked up from a shelf of second hand books in a Pembrokeshire cafe. Last read from the library when I was 10 or 11. I loved the first half - almost a manual on how to survive on a coral island in the South Seas. Enjoyed the pirate interlude as a bit of a change.
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Loathed the last bit of cannibals and christians. However the language is delicious throughout.
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LibraryThing member 3argonauta
Read this after finishing Lord of the Flies after it was mentioned by the main character at the end of the story. The beginning of the book was wonderful. All the beautiful descriptions of the Coral Island kept me wanting to read more books like this. Was a great escape during the pandemic
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lockdown. The back half of the book was not my favorite. Not a fan of the dogma and all the talk of missionaries saving savages, although I understand it was important in the story and common for the time that it was written in. Rolled my eyes more times than I care to mention in the last few chapters of the book.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1857

Physical description

196 p.; 9 inches
Page: 0.7082 seconds