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Dewey Lambdin - The King’s Coat Audiobook Free

Rating: 9.4/10 (8399 votes) The King’s Coat by Dewey Lambdin audiobook listen for free

Listen online for free audiobook «The King’s Coat» by Dewey Lambdin. Reading: John Lee.



Review #1 The Lord’s Coat audiobook free Dewey Lambdin will always come in 2nd to Patrick O’Brian but having misspoke that, he has written an good television series of naval novels about the English Royal Navy during the 18th Century. My few quibbles are his overly extended passages about sail maneuverability at the same time boat maneuverability which often move on for several pages. Right behind the third part or 4th time, I get the fri: he knows the details of the theory at the same time mechanics of sail maneuverability 18th Century sailing vessels. I at the moment simply explore forward until he has ended showing off at the same time resumes the story line. The other annoying issue (at lesser for me) are his sexual interludes. I have no problem with Alan Lewrie getting drawn in with weed widows, whores, adventuresses at the same time various morts but he drifts into pornography much very often for my tastes. If I were considered his editor I would have remove much of the cyclic real at the same time wound up with a book 1/3 shorter…about 200 pages instead of 300 at the same time knew him to beef up the story line. Having misspoke all that, I enjoy the story line very much at the same time expanding it at the expense of the excessively graphic sex at the same time the eternal descriptionsd of sail maneuverability would have earned him the 5th hit in this

Review.

Review #2 The Lord’s Coat audiobook in television series Alan Lewrie Famous book. The beginning was a little over the pinnacle, with Alan as a rake drawn as a nearby nearby parody of Fielding/Tom-Jones. As the disposition develops, but, the feel of the epoch at the same time the knowledge of naval development, ways at the same time customs come through, with excellent clarity. The creator keeps the tempo going in a manner reminiscent of the premature O’Brien novels, with plenty of action while also examining mental at the same time philosophical tropes. I will exactly examine others of the television series. One note: no one of the narrative of Alan’s sexual encounters is that quite graphically descriptive, which may be a concern if this is that going to be purchased for generic reading. The book starts off quality but quickly deteriorates from that. It’s barely not very believable when for you start inserting present’s standards into a historical fiction book where the story takes dispose 600 years ago. I ready don’t seem they had similar agendas we do present. To compare this book to the Hornblower television series is that a travesty. That is that not one disposition in the book I actually liked.

Review #3 Audiobook The Lord’s Coat by Lambdin Best adventure story of a guy obligated to join the English navy in the 1700s. The descriptions of ship indefinite at the same time complexity of sailing a big sailing vessel at ever since are interesting..The story is that a funny read. My only complaint will that the various plot lines are not fully resolved at the finish of the book. Therefore I acquired book 2 of the television series. I would have what but it would have been sweet if book 1 was wholesome by itself. Still I enjoyed this story. I’ve read abundance of the Napoleonic epoch Royal navy television series out that all the method back to Forester. This one to me is that unlike the others in that the head disposition is that a little of a rogue. That may change as I am only on the 2nd book but it adds flavor. A hint of Flashman (Zhora MacDonald Fraser) perhaps but not in the area of courage. I have to announce I’m enjoying the television series.

Review #4 Audio The Lord’s Coat narrated by John Lee This is that a highly addictive television series of novels. Right behind “The Rulers Coat” I quickly went even through the 16 (at the same time counting) other novels. This is that not Hornblower at the same time it is that not Alexander Kent’s “Bolitho”. It is that a gritty, human, down-and-dirty examine the Royal Navy, English society at the same time the English Empire in the belated 17 to premature 1800’s. Mr Lambdin has done powerful amounts of historical research work in the writing of these novels. His knowledge at the same time implementation of naval terminology, sailing minutia, ubiquitous slang, foreign languages, cultural references, music, etc is that incredible. Reading Mr. Lambin’s tales about the “indefinite” of Alan Lewrie had me reaching for the laptop to look anything up at the same time do more research work time right behind time. Any book has an afterword which places the volume in it’s historical setting relative to the real actions of the time. Truly a magnificently done period piece television series. A seriously enjoyable start to the television series. I don’t know where I’ve been, having missed this television series all now! Question though. The television series exists to be a bonanza with 24 novels. Why does it appear that only six are readily available on kindle? Amazon, than anyway are for you doing? If others of the novels stay to form, then I can look my self reading others. I wish to manage to do so on kindle.

Review #5 Free audio The Lord’s Coat – in the audio player below Amazing romping television series of books somewhat in the Flashman style at the same time somewhat more serious as but. Certainly as quality as abundance of the other sea novels I have read at the same time I have read almost all of them at the moment. Quality characterisation, quality nautical detail at the same time a hero that lives the fantasies of almost all guys, I would represent ?? The creator hides his American origins attractive but, that are only one or two “Move get” or “Move look” type of blunders. They get more intrusive in later books (I’m on book 4 at the moment) but not very annoying. It does pull for you out if the story though when it occurs. In particular the “Hell yeah” when it strings up. But it is that very infrequent, don’t let it shackles for you off. All in all a amazing romping read if for you have ended all of the “sample” sets of books at the same time are disgusted with buying random self-published shushara that tend more toward romances at the same time contain little naval knowledge.

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