Where to Start with Daniel Defoe: A Reading Guide
Where to start with Daniel Defoe — how to approach Robinson Crusoe, his essential novel and the founding text of English prose fiction. A complete reading guide.
Daniel Defoe (1660–1731) was an English writer, journalist, and pamphleteer whose Robinson Crusoe (1719) is widely considered the first English novel — or at least the founding text of the novelistic tradition that would become the dominant literary form of the following two centuries. Defoe published the novel when he was nearly sixty, after a career as a journalist and political writer, and followed it with Moll Flanders (1722), Colonel Jack (1722), and Roxana (1724) — a burst of narrative fiction in his final decade that laid the formal and thematic ground for the English novel. Robinson Crusoe has never been out of print.
Where to Start: Robinson Crusoe (1719)
The essential Defoe — and one of the most consequential narratives in the English literary tradition. The novel’s framing is characteristic of Defoe’s journalism: it is presented as the actual memoir of one Robinson Crusoe, with a preface attesting to its authenticity, and it maintains this documentary pretence throughout. The story is familiar: a restless Yorkshire merchant’s son goes to sea against his father’s advice, is shipwrecked near Trinidad after a series of adventures and misfortunes, and lives alone on a desert island for twenty-eight years before being rescued.
What makes the novel extraordinary — and what made it revolutionary — is not the adventure framework but the texture of Crusoe’s solitary project. Defoe spends more time on the problem of how to bake bread (build a kiln, fire clay pots, grow grain, grind it by hand, learn to leaven and bake) than on the shipwreck itself. The novel’s interest is in practical intelligence applied to survival: every problem Crusoe faces — shelter, food, defence, tools, clothing, time-keeping — is worked through with a methodical specificity that made the book the founding text of the survival narrative and gave it a readability that persists across three centuries.
Crusoe’s character is the novel’s other achievement. He is not a hero in the romantic sense: he is a self-justifying, commercially minded Protestant who narrates his own story with an unselfconscious self-interest that is both comic and revealing. His treatment of Friday — who is taught to call Crusoe “Master,” given a new name, and incorporated into Crusoe’s world on entirely Crusoe’s terms — is the colonial ideology of the period made narrative. Contemporary readers who engage with this dimension find Robinson Crusoe as intellectually rich as it is historically important.
J.M. Coetzee’s Foe (1986), which retells the Robinson Crusoe story from the perspectives of a woman and Friday who have been excluded from Crusoe’s account, is the definitive postcolonial response to the novel — and reading the two together is among the most rewarding experiences in English literary history.
Reading Daniel Defoe
Begin with Robinson Crusoe — it is his essential and most enduring work. Moll Flanders (1722) is his other major novel and a fine companion read, with a strikingly modern female narrator. Both standalone.
For the full Daniel Defoe bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Daniel Defoe author page on Editors Reads.
Affiliate disclosure: Links to Amazon on this page are affiliate links. We earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where should I start with Daniel Defoe?
Robinson Crusoe (1719) is the essential and foundational Defoe — the account of a shipwrecked Englishman who survives alone on a tropical island for twenty-eight years, building a life through practical ingenuity and Protestant self-discipline. Often called the first English novel; the founding text of the survival narrative, the desert-island genre, and a significant strand of thinking about civilisation and labour.
What is Robinson Crusoe about?
Robinson Crusoe follows the narrator from his early restlessness and sea voyages, through his capture and enslavement by Moorish pirates, to his successful sugar plantation in Brazil — and then the shipwreck near Trinidad that strands him alone for twenty-eight years. The novel's core is Crusoe's systematic reconstruction of civilised life on the island: salvaging tools from the wreck, building a shelter, learning to grow grain and make bread, domesticating goats, keeping a calendar, and eventually encountering the man he calls Friday.
Is Robinson Crusoe still worth reading?
Robinson Crusoe retains its readability three centuries after publication — the practical problem-solving sections, where Crusoe works out how to accomplish basic tasks with the materials available, remain genuinely fascinating and were the model for the survival genre that followed. The novel's ideology — its Protestant self-justification, its treatment of Friday as a dependent rather than an equal, its colonial assumptions — is both historically important and requires active critical engagement from contemporary readers. The book rewards reading alongside its critical history.
What should I read after Robinson Crusoe?
After Robinson Crusoe, Defoe's Moll Flanders (1722) is his other major novel — a female narrator's account of poverty, crime, and survival in English society, with comparable narrative vitality. For the colonial and ideological dimensions, J.M. Coetzee's Foe (1986) is the definitive literary response to Robinson Crusoe, retelling the story from the perspective of Friday and a woman excluded from Crusoe's account. Patrick White's Voss and William Golding's Lord of the Flies are among the many novels the Crusoe tradition has generated.
