1. Treasure Island
Robert Louis Stevenson · 1883
A cabin boy, a treasure map, and the most influential pirate story ever written -- Long John Silver invented the pirate archetype (parrot, sea chest, moral ambiguity) every pirate story since has been copying.
What’s easy to forget, because the tropes got copied so thoroughly, is how tightly plotted this actually is – there’s barely a wasted chapter. If you’ve only encountered pirates through later, softer adaptations, the original is leaner and a little more dangerous than you’d expect.
Read it if: you want the original pirate adventure -- fast, plot-driven, and the reason treasure maps, 'X marks the spot,' and one-legged pirates with parrots are cultural shorthand at all
Skip it if: you want deep characterization or modern pacing -- this is a straightforward 19th-century boys' adventure novel, not a psychologically complex read









