Fifteen Days: An Extract from Edward Colvil's Journal by Mary Lowell Putnam

(2 User reviews)   510
Putnam, Mary Lowell, 1810-1898 Putnam, Mary Lowell, 1810-1898
English
Okay, so picture this: you find an old journal from the 1700s. It's not just any diary—it's written by Edward Colvil, a man who spent fifteen days completely alone on a remote island after a shipwreck. The whole book is his raw, unfiltered account of those two weeks. It's less about surviving storms or hunting for food (though that's there), and more about what happens to your mind when all human contact is stripped away. The real mystery isn't 'will he be rescued?'—you know he was, because we're reading his journal—but 'who will he be when he comes back?' Putnam discovered this manuscript and basically said, 'People need to read this.' It's a quiet, intense look at isolation that somehow feels incredibly timely, even though it's centuries old. If you've ever wondered what you'd actually think about for two weeks with no distractions, this is your chance to peek inside someone's head who lived it.
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Mary Lowell Putnam presents us with a fascinating piece of found history: the journal of Edward Colvil, a man shipwrecked and utterly alone on a desolate island for fifteen days in the mid-18th century. The book is framed as Putnam's transcription and presentation of this discovered document, with some introductory notes to set the scene. We then plunge directly into Colvil's first-person account.

The Story

The plot is straightforward in the best way. After a maritime disaster, Colvil finds himself the sole survivor washed ashore. The initial struggle is practical—finding water, shelter, and food. But as the days crawl by, the battle shifts inward. The journal becomes a record of his mental state as much as his physical one. He details his routines to keep sane, his observations of the bleak landscape, his fluctuating hope, and the crushing weight of silence. There are no villains here except solitude itself. The tension comes from watching a disciplined mind grapple with the profound emptiness of having no one to speak to, nothing to do but wait and think.

Why You Should Read It

This book got under my skin. It's not an action-packed adventure tale. It's a psychological portrait, and its power comes from its simplicity and honesty. Putnam, by choosing to present it with minimal interference, lets Colvil's voice shine through. You feel his determination, his moments of despair, and his strange, growing intimacy with his barren surroundings. In our hyper-connected world, reading about total isolation is a jarring and thought-provoking experience. It makes you ask big questions about what we rely on to feel like ourselves. Is it other people? Busywork? The constant noise of society? Colvil's journal strips all that away and shows what's left.

Final Verdict

This is a hidden gem for readers who love historical diaries, deep dives into the human psyche, or quiet, literary survival stories. If you enjoyed the introspective parts of Robinson Crusoe but wished they were less fictionalized and more raw, you'll find a lot here. It's also perfect for anyone interested in early American literature or the history of everyday experience. Fair warning: it's a slow, thoughtful burn, not a page-turner. But for the right reader, it's a profoundly moving and memorable look at one man's fifteen-day conversation with himself.

Liam Thompson
1 year ago

From the very first page, it provides a comprehensive overview perfect for everyone. Exactly what I needed.

Robert Thomas
2 months ago

I came across this while browsing and the depth of research presented here is truly commendable. Exactly what I needed.

5
5 out of 5 (2 User reviews )

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