Showing posts with label historical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label historical. Show all posts

The Blighted Cliffs: Book One of the Reluctant Adventures of Lieutenant Martin Jerrold Review

The Blighted Cliffs: Book One of the Reluctant Adventures of Lieutenant Martin Jerrold
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I bought this book because it promised to be a naval analog of George McDonald Fraser's FLASHMAN. It was not but I was not disappointed.
The books takes place on the Kentish coast during the Napoleonic wars. Lieutenant Martin Jerrold has been sent there in disgrace. While he was at the battle of Trafalgar, he took no active part. He managed to get himself stuck in the hold of his ship and lost out on any chance of notice or distinction. So it is that he is sent to work with a revenue cutter and help suppress the thriving smuggling trade. He is only there for a single night, drunk, before he manages to get into trouble. While stepping out to relieve himself, he wanders into a smuggling operation gone wrong. A man is killed and the Lieutenant becomes the prime suspect. He finds himself in a situation where he must not only carry out his duties to suppress the smuggling trade, he must use all of his free time to try and clear his name before the deadline runs out. His bad reputation, bad luck and French intrigue do not help matters.
The protagonist of the book is not cut from heroic cloth but he is not the complete poltroon that the Harry Flashman character is; he does not seek trouble for its own sake. Instead, he is a bumbler who has bad luck. When the chips are down, though, he does possess a modicum of honor. He is not a character we like to revile. Instead, he is one with whom it is all too easy to identify.
This book is not as funny or exciting as the FLASHMAN series but neither is it as strained and contrived. It is a good read and I look forward to reading more.


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An Affair of Honor (Honor Series) (The Honor Series) Review

An Affair of Honor (Honor Series) (The Honor Series)
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An excellent book in an excellent series. The purchase process, timely delivery, and condition of the book was also rather ironically an affair of honor. Very Pleased!

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At the beginning of this fifth novel in Robert N. Macomber's award-winning Honor Series, it's December 1873 and Lieutenant Peter Wake is the executive officer of the USS Omaha on dreary patrol in the West Indies. Lonely for his family, he is looking forward to returning home to Pensacola in a few months and rekindling his troubled marriage with Linda.But fate has other plans for Wake. He runs afoul of the Royal Navy in Antigua and a beautiful French woman enters his life in Martinique. Then he's suddenly sent off on staff assignment to Europe, where he is soon immersed in the cynical swirl of Old World politics. Wake finds himself running for his life after getting embroiled in a Spanish civil war. Then he gets caught up in diplomatic intrigue among the French, Germans, and British. But his real test comes when he and his old friend Sean Rork are sent on a no-win mission in northern Africa. Not the least of his troubles is Madame Catherine Faber de Champlain, wife of a French diplomat. Her many charms involve Peter Wake in an affair of honor.

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Private Life Review

Private Life
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In "Private Life," Jane Smiley has presented readers with another beautifully crafted novel. The tone of the book is reminiscent of Sinclair Lewis' works; its texture and atmosphere are solidly middle-American. "Private Life" is the story of a marriage and the resulting disillusionment experienced when the wife sees her husband for what he really is. What she thought was a private life is, in reality, a life of quiet desperation in which she has subordinated herself to the myopic vision her husband espouses. The author draws back the curtain on everyday characters' lives to reveal deeper truths about those individuals and, as a result, the reader may be prodded into reexamining his/her own life choices.
Both the prologue and epilogue are set in 1942, but the majority of the novel's action occurs during the period between 1883 and that date. In order to appreciate the plot, one must keep in mind the status of women during those years. Margaret Mayfield, the daughter of a doctor who committed suicide, is his oldest surviving child; her two sisters are more beautiful and considered more marriageable than she. Margaret is a bookish, but not brilliant; personable, but lacking a dynamic personality. Lavinia Mayfield, Margaret's mother, daughter of John Gentry a Missouri farmer, is ever mindful of the advantages of a "good marriage." Dr. Andrew Jackson Jefferson Early, a Navy Captain and PhD, and Montgomery County's (MO) most famous son fits the bill. Margaret, conforming to the dictates of societal norms, accepts his marriage proposal. Following their marriage, the two move to Mare Island Naval Shipyard in California where Captain Early is in charge of a small observatory.
Without giving too much detail and spoiling "Private Life" for the reader, suffice it to say Andrew Early proves to be a spoiled, pompous, know-it-all who expects Margaret's unquestioning support. His private life involved professional and personal secrets which, had Margaret known of them, would have affected her decision to marry. Margaret's private life is not so much private as a life of quiet desperation; she has no focus other than her husband and his theories of the universe. She questions whether his world view is somehow an argument against education - whether he might have been happier with smaller thoughts. During a time when Margaret begins purchasing prints from a Japanese artist, she sees depicted in one of the pictures that there is a moment just before the recipient of the gift realizes the evil intentions of the sender. This highlights Margaret's awakening and her realization that Andrew is not all he seemed to be; she has been drawn into his world and is expected to orbit around him. Through letters Margaret discovers in Andrew's office, she learns that what she thought was a private life has been orchestrated by others who know more about Andrew than she does. At one point, Margaret's friend Dora tells her that thinking of Margaret always made her give thanks for soundness and stability; that somewhere in the world things were going on as they always do. Margaret replies that Dora talks like a woman who never married.
"Private Life" is an emotionally charged, sometimes disturbing portrait of a woman trapped by society's expectations and her own acquiescence to her husband's demands. Her life is subsumed into his. These complex characters are finely drawn; each is distinct and adds to the overall theme and the plot of the novel. Each individual plays an important role in Margaret's subordinating herself to her husband or in her awakening to the truth of her life and of her marriage. I was unable to put the book down once I started it and recommend you read this when life's demands will allow you to do so in one sitting. Jane Smiley has written another American classic; it is intelligent, engrossing, and speaks volumes about the danger of a life so private that it is no life at all.

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The Tide of War: A Nathan Peake Novel (The Nathan Peake Novels) Review

The Tide of War: A Nathan Peake Novel (The Nathan Peake Novels)
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Tide of War is the second book in a trilogy dealing with the naval career of Nathan Peake, a British naval officer during the napoleonic wars. Early in this novel, Peake is promoted to Post-Captain, and is ordered to the West Indies where he is to take command of HMS Unicorn, a vessel whose previous Captain has been killed in an apparent mutiny, and his body found washed ashore at the inlet to Lake Pontchartrain with a slit throat.
Although it is the second in a trilogy, this work can be read as a stand-alone novel. I had not read the first novel in the trilogy, but found that I had no trouble following the storyline as the first few chapters do a good job of filling in the background of Peake's career.
Overall, this is an action packed novel of napoleonic era naval fiction in the fine tradition of C.S. Forester and Patrick O'Brian that should appeal to most fans of the genre. While the character of Nathan Peake is not as well drawn as Horatio Hornblower or Jack Aubrey, the plot of the novel satisfies with rousing battle scenes both at sea and in the swamps and bayous around New Orleans.

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Glory in the Name: A Novel of the Confederate Navy Review

Glory in the Name: A Novel of the Confederate Navy
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"Ironclads at sea, armies moving by rail, communicating by telegraph. Rifled cannons, rifled rifles, exploding ordinance." They were all Americans, like it or not, all children of that particular genius that was America. How apt then that in less than a year of war, Americans fighting Americans, they should forever alter forever the very nature of warfare."
That paragraph, found late in this marvelous book, truly frames the story that plays out between it's covers.
It comes from a perspective that many of us find at least different and sometimes uncomfortable. It is a story of the Confederate Navy and is told with sympathy and understanding as well as painstaking historical attention to fact.
Samual Bowater, a former officer in the United States Navy has resigned his commission to return to his home, the Confederacy and seeks to help in the only way he knows how, by seeking to serve as a naval officer. He watches from a distance and paints the scene as Fort Sumter is fired on and the Civil War begins.
Robey Paine, a man of Mississippi with three sons to send to fight for the Confederacy believes that all of them have been lost in battle. A certian madness is the result, which will find him commissioning the conversion of a ship to an ironclad and leads him to the discovery that one of his som's has survived.
This is a moving story of a small part of the Civil War which shows it's horror and it's passion in way that is compelling.
Although I live in Maine, as does the author - about 25 miles from me - I was unaware of his writing until this book was recommended to my wife by an insightful bookstore clerk as a Christmas present for me. It is, I believe, the best book I have read in quite some time and it has already started me ordering other books written by James Nelson and looking forward to his next effort. I would give it ten stars if I could.

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Men-of-War: Life in Nelson's Navy Review

Men-of-War: Life in Nelson's Navy
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This book covers some of the ground of Brian Lavery's 'Nelson's Navy'. Lavery's book is much more comprehensive and much larger. O'Brian's book has some color plates, but it was really written to take advantage of his name. I'd buy Lavery's book first, or "The Young Sea Officer's Sheet Anchor, or a Key to the Leading of Rigging and to Practical Seamanship" by Darcy Lever (a contemporary book).

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