The Wrong Box is a black comedy novel co-written by Robert Louis
Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne first printed in 1889. It is a comical tale
of misunderstandings, attempt of fraud, drunkenness, false identity and
other misfortunes. This book is about the last remaining survivors of a
tontine_a group life-insurance policy in which the last surviving member
supports to receive a future. It is a amusing, unconventional and
brilliantly written piece of work. The story includes the last two such
survivors and their relations, a train crash, missing uncles, excess
dead bodies, innocent spectators. This story is about two brothers who
are the last two surviving members of a tontine. Joseph and Masterman
Finsbury are brothers. As a child, both started a tontine with 37 other
boys: all of the children put in a sum of money, and the last alive
person would receive it. Their two nephews have to do to inherit
everything is make sure Joseph continues Masterman. This story was begun
in 1887 by Lloyd Osbourne, was briefly titled 'The Finsbury Tontine',
then 'A Game of Bluff', before finally becoming 'The Wrong Box' prior to
first publication.