Adventure Fiction
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An Adventure Fiction is a Type of Fiction that usually presents danger, or gives the reader a sense of excitement.
- Example(s):
- The Most Dangerous Game (1924).
- …
- The Call of the Wild, Jack London, 1903
- Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain, 1884
- Treasure Island, Robert Louis Stevenson, 1882.
- The Mysterious Island, Jules Verne, 1875
- Around the World in Eighty Days, Jules Verne, 1872
- Journey to the Center of the Earth, Jules Verne, 1864
- Moby Dick (1851).
- …
- The Swiss Family Robinson, Johann David Wyss, 1812
- …
- Robinson Crusoe, Daniel Defoe, 1719.
- …
- See: Romance (Prose Fiction).
References
2022
- (Wikipedia, 2022) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/adventure_fiction Retrieved:2022-11-12.
- Adventure fiction is a type of fiction that usually presents danger, or gives the reader a sense of excitement. Some adventure fiction also satisfies the literary definition of romance fiction. [1]
- ↑ "Essay on Romance", Prose Works volume vi, p. 129, quoted in "Introduction" to Walter Scott's Quentin Durward, ed. Susan Maning. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992, p. xxv.