If you'd like to read more of him, he also wrote Treasure Island.
The author who created the characters of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is Robert Louis Stevenson. He featured these characters in his novella titled "Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde."
Yes, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is a fiction book written by Robert Louis Stevenson.
Yes, "Jekyll and Hyde" refers to the novella "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" by Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson, which was first published in 1886. It explores the duality of human nature through the characters of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Robert Louis Stevenson
The evil side of Dr. Jekyll was Mr. Hyde, a malevolent alter ego created by a potion that Dr. Jekyll concocted to separate and indulge his darker impulses. Mr. Hyde embodied all of Dr. Jekyll's repressed desires and immoral instincts, leading to a downward spiral of destructive behavior.
Mr Hyde is Dr. Jekyll with all his goodness removed. The author (Robert Louis Stevenson) emphasizes this fact by making Mr. Hyde physically a lot smaller than Dr. Jekyll as well.
In the story of the "Strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," Dr. Jekyll turns into Mr. Hyde and visa versa. The story is associated with dissociative identity disorder where Dr. Jekyll represents the good in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde represents the evil side in Dr, Jekyll.
Dr. Jekyll's nickname was Mr. Hyde.
Mister Hyde is Dr. Jekyll minus all his goodness. Dr. Jekyll was a big man, of noble stature. Mr. Hyde was short and hunched.
The girl who was trampled in "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" was going to deliver a message for Mr. Hyde, the evil alter ego of Dr. Jekyll. She was seeking to deliver a note to Dr. Jekyll's residence.
The author of the 1886 novel "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" is Robert Louis Stevenson. He wrote it as an experiment as to how good and evil personalities could affect a story.
In "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" by Robert Louis Stevenson, Dr. Jekyll transforms into Mr. Hyde after drinking a potion he created to separate his good and evil selves. Regent's Park is just one of the settings where the transformation takes place, symbolizing the struggle between the two sides of Jekyll's personality.