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The Wrong Box
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More by Robert Louis Stevenson
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A clearer way to understand The Wrong Box through themes, characters, and key ideas
This reading guide highlights what stands out in The Wrong Box through 4 core themes, 4 character profiles, and 10 chapter-level ideas. It is meant to help readers decide whether the book fits their taste and deepen the reading once they begin.
About this book
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What the book is doing
“The Wrong Box” is a darkly comic novel by Robert Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne, satirizing Victorian greed and familial dysfunction through a farcical plot centered on a tontine. The story follows the two surviving Finsbury brothers, Joseph and Masterman, whose potential inheritance from a shared fund hinges on who outlives the other. When Masterman dies, his nephews, particularly the conniving Morris, embark on an increasingly absurd and macabre scheme to conceal his death and claim the tontine, leading to a series of elaborate deceptions and mistaken identities involving a missing body, a train accident, and a series of hilarious mishaps. The novel masterfully blends dark humor with sharp social commentary, exposing the lengths to which people will go for financial gain.
Key Themes
Greed and Avarice
The central driving force of the entire narrative. The Finsbury nephews' insatiable desire for the tontine inheritance leads them to outrageous and morally questionable acts, highlighting the corrupting influence of wealth and the lengths to which people will go for financial gain.
Absurdity of Life and Death
The novel treats profound subjects like death and the human condition with a lighthearted, farcical tone. The repeated misplacement and confusion of bodies, the train accident, and the general chaotic nature of events underscore the inherent unpredictability and often nonsensical aspects of existence, making light of human attempts to control fate.
““The world is a comedy to those that think, a tragedy to those that feel.””
How does the novel use dark humor to explore serious themes like death and greed?
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