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<title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson</title>
<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
<link>http://www.botar.us/treasureisland.html</link>
<description>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson read by Roy Trumbull open source by Project Gutenberg </description>
<itunes:subtitle>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson</itunes:subtitle>
<itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
<copyright>none</copyright>
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		<itunes:name>botar</itunes:name>
		<itunes:email>botar@sprynet.com</itunes:email>
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Thu, 05 Oct 2006 10:09:44 -0700</lastBuildDate>
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	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 1 - 2</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 3 - 4</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 5 - 6</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 7 - 8</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 9 - 10</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 11 - 12</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 13</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 14</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 15</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 16</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 17</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 18</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 19</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 20</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 21</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 22</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 23 - 24</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 25 - 26</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 27</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 28</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 29</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 30</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 31</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 32</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:keywords>Robert Louis Stevenson Treasure Island Long John Silver</itunes:keywords>
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	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 33</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
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	    	   <pubDate>Sun, 15 Oct 2006 09:00:00 -0700 </pubDate>
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	<itunes:keywords>Robert Louis Stevenson Treasure Island Long John Silver</itunes:keywords>
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    <item>
	    <title>Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson,  chapter 34</title>
	    	<itunes:author>botar</itunes:author>
	    <link>http://www.botar.us</link>
	    <description>we are the botar</description>
		    <itunes:subtitle>original air date 2005</itunes:subtitle>
		    <itunes:summary>Robert Louis Stevensons most famous novel. Treasure Island was published in 1883, although it had appeared initially in Young Folks in serial form July 1881-June 1882 under the alternative title of  -The Sea-Cook or Treaure Island-.  It developed from an imaginary map that Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne had devised on holiday and this goes some way towards explaining the books appeal among children. Moreover, the famous antihero Long John Silver was the invention of Stevensons friend, William Henley. Nonetheless, the tale is the archetypal nineteenth century -ripping yarn-. The narrator is Jim Hawkins, son of a guesthouse owner on the west coast of England sometime in the eighteenth century. To the inn come firstly an old buccaneer who has a map of Captain Flints treasure, and secondly a group of pirates under the command of ominous blind man Pew. Jim Hawkins, our hero, in an act of bravery and cunning gets hold of the map before this rabid mob gets it. He delivers the map to Squire Trelawney, and together they set off for Treasure Island in the Squires schooner. The rest of the crew, apart from Dr Livesey -a friend of the squire- are a company collected by Long John Silver. The latter and his men try to mutiny and get hold of the treasure themselves but Jim intervenes and through a series of enthralling adventures we find ourselves on Treasure Island with the marooned Ben Gunn and ever closer to the treasure itself.</itunes:summary>
	    		<enclosure url="http://www.botar.us/treasureisland/treasure_island_34_stevenson.mp3"
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	    	   <pubDate>Sun, 15 Oct 2006 09:00:00 -0700 </pubDate>
	   <category>Talk Radio</category>
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	<itunes:category text="Public Radio" />
	<itunes:category text="Family" />
    <itunes:category text="Literature" />
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	<itunes:keywords>Robert Louis Stevenson Treasure Island Long John Silver</itunes:keywords>
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