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King Solomon's Mines (Great Illustrated Classics)
King Solomon's Mines - Great Illustrated Classics
Author: H. Rider Haggard
Three men set out to find the world's most fabulous treasure --if it even exists! On the way they must cross burning deserts and freezing mountains, face hostile tribes and overcome ancient superstitions, warring armies and witches' curses, as they search for lost diamonds and lost men. Or is it only a haunting legend that hurls them into danger...  more »
ISBN: 112483
Publication Date: 1997
Pages: 239
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Publisher: Baronet Books
Book Type: Hardcover
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reviewed King Solomon's Mines (Great Illustrated Classics) on + 216 more book reviews
Great early chapter book for an independant reader.

Age Range: 8 to 12
Series: Great Illustrated Classics Series

ANNOTATION
In the 1880's in southern Africa, Allan Quatermain, a hunter and guide, joins forces with a sea captain and an English nobleman to find the latter's missing brother, who disappeared while searching for King Solomon's legendary lost diamond mines.
FROM THE PUBLISHER
When first published, King Solomon's Mines (1885) was an enormous popular success. The narrative follows the explorations of Allan Quatermain, a fortune hunter who travels to Africa in search of ancient treasures and a lost fellow explorer. Written as an adventure story, the novel is also a late-Victorian imperial romance that illuminates the politics of British imperialist capitalism in 1870s and 1880s South Africa.

This edition includes contemporary reviews, other writings by Haggard on Africa and romance, and documents focusing on imperialism and diamond mining in late nineteenth-century South Africa.
FROM THE CRITICS
Gale Research
As legend has it, Haggard wagered that he could produce a tale equal to Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island, which was enormously popular at that time. The result was King Solomon's Mines, an exhilarating account of adventurer Allan Quatermain's search for lost treasure in Africa. During his quest, Quatermain nearly freezes to death in the mountains, becomes a captive of barbaric natives, and narrowly avoids a dangerous trap while recovering lost diamonds. This exciting tale, though perceived as somewhat slapdash in style by some reviewers, found considerable favor with English readers. As Andrew Lang noted in an 1885 edition of Saturday Review, "Since Treasure Island we have seen no such healthily exciting volume." In 1987,Armchair Detective contributor Robert Sandels commented that King Solomon's Mines "has an appeal and durability which leads one to wonder if it isn't more than just a well-told tale."


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