Black Sails

Black Sails

2014 • Action & Adventure, DramaTV-MA
The pirate adventures of Captain Flint and his men twenty years prior to Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic “Treasure Island.” Flint, the most brilliant and most feared pirate captain of his day, takes on a fast-talking young addition to his crew who goes by the name John Silver. Threatened with extinction on all sides, they fight for the survival of New Providence Island, the most notorious criminal haven of its day – a debauched paradise teeming with pirates, prostitutes, thieves and fortune seekers, a place defined by both its enlightened ideals and its stunning brutality.

Why you shoud read the novel

If you crave the thrill of high-seas adventure and cunning pirate intrigue, Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island is a literary classic that has captivated readers of all ages for generations. The novel introduces unforgettable archetypes—Long John Silver, Jim Hawkins, and the secretive treasure map—that have shaped the very image of piracy in popular culture. Reading the original allows you to experience the atmosphere, tension, and adventure as Stevenson intended, unfiltered and immersive in its Victorian prose. Delving into Treasure Island offers depth beyond what television can provide; the nuances of character motives, themes of courage and morality, and the evocative descriptions of the island and the sea are masterfully rendered. Stevenson's storytelling builds suspense and paints a vivid world of danger, greed, and loyalty, providing insight into the psychology of both heroes and villains. Moreover, by reading the book, you connect directly with the origins of many pirate legends and traditions. Treasure Island is not simply a story—in its pages, it lays the groundwork for nearly every pirate tale that followed. Choosing the novel over the television adaptation is an invitation to original adventure and unmatched literary craftsmanship.

Adaptation differences

Black Sails serves primarily as a prequel to Treasure Island rather than a direct adaptation, focusing on the events, relationships, and intrigues that lead up to the famous search for Captain Flint’s buried treasure. While the TV series invents new characters, plots, and backstories, Stevenson’s novel is tightly focused on Jim Hawkins's quest and the immediate exploits of the pirates following the treasure map. The creators of Black Sails introduce morally ambiguous pirates, political machination in Nassau, and gritty realism absent from the original book’s more romanticized view. Another notable difference lies in tone and content. Treasure Island, while suspenseful and occasionally dark, maintains a sense of adventure suitable for younger audiences. Black Sails, on the other hand, is mature, with graphic violence, sexual content, and complex themes of power and social upheaval, aligning itself more with modern television drama expectations than classic children’s literature. The characters themselves are significantly expanded and sometimes re-imagined. Long John Silver and Captain Flint appear in both works, but Black Sails dives deep into their origins, motivations, and shifting alliances, often painting them in a more sympathetic or complex light. In the novel, these figures are seen largely through Jim's youthful perspective and with less psychological depth, making the series’ portrayal both an expansion and a reinterpretation. Finally, the structure of narrative diverges. Treasure Island is told in the first person from Jim Hawkins’s point of view, shaping events through his coming-of-age lens. Black Sails uses an ensemble cast and a nonlinear narrative style, providing various viewpoints and exploring the broader world of 18th-century piracy rather than a singular, personal story. This structural shift results in new themes and conflicts, expanding far beyond what Stevenson envisioned in his classic work.

Black Sails inspired from

Treasure Island
by Robert Louis Stevenson