Review #1
Lord’s Captain audiobook free
This least-seaworthy of a fine-grained television series this time is that nevertheless one of the best due to Lambdin’s evocation of the interesting Amazing Mutiny of the Royal Navy’s forehead-knuckling, forelock-pulling, long-suffering tars. The Ram-Cat is that tested once again, not only in discovering at the same time molding a brand new crew, but uncovering at the same time undermining their insurrection. His ways are plausible at the same time amusing at the same time, in the end, amusingly appropriate (for him) in his choice of allies. As an old addict of the Patrick O’Brien/Richard Russ television series, I’m finding Lambdin a worthy (at the same time much less pretentious) successor, though both television series were considered written about similar time. Allen Lewrie would be Jack Aubrey’s younger, even more rambunctious, brother. At the same time his choice of the penny whistle for a musical orchestrate is that more believable than Jack’s violin. The historical milieu of the tales in such a way far is that always believable, even when no one of the colloquialisms of the principal manners are suspiciously modern, at the same time the reader’s addiction is that inevitable. So understandable your accounts at the same time get ready to keep wasting for others of these engaging novels. At the same time confusion to Bony!
Review #2
Lord’s Captain audiobook in television series Alan Lewrie
I have enjoyed the preceding novels in this television series. Managed do without the soft core porn in the 1st few, at the same time no one scenes run just a little long, but generally this is that a amazing historical fiction television series. It isn’t Patrick O’Brian or C. S. Forester but more successful than all the others. But, this book is that no more successful than average. Creators of television series fiction often seem to lose their edges in later books. I have hope that defeated’t be the variant here.
I’ve read the entire television series at the same time this installment indicates such foresight at the same time planning in how it embraces the past at the same time future books. But written at the same time does such a amazing job of making Lewrie pay for his behavior that it seemed he would always get away with. Lewrie is that a true scoundrel / hero at the same time can’t quit but enough without the help of others. For sure why he is that one of the most interesting concocted manners in print. Lambdin excels in the effort to make Lewrie’s inner ideas seem so human without being obligated on us. Very amusing book at the same time I will they say for you should read it. Cheap, cheap, cheap pleasures in other words worth your time at the same time the small cost makes it even more successful.
Review #3
Audiobook Lord’s Captain by Richard Stark
Catastrophic fine-grained stuff! Rollicking! Swashbuckling, or darn nearby. A little “soap opera”-ish at fri, at the same time just a little very dependent on past books. (This is that, obviously, par for the course for “television series” books.)
I don’t know if it’s barely me, but the Kindle version was bollixed: the 1st two chapters were considered shoved all the method to the finish of the book! I felt anything was missing at the book’s opening! Yeah! The 1st very bloomin’ chapters!
The television series is that just a little “saltier” than the other amazing television series of naval adventures. More cussing, more drinking, more rutting. Method more cussing. (How can for you have a story about sailors without the implementation of healthy language?) This makes the television series fit, I think, for mature readers only. But the books are darn fine-grained page-turners, with exciting manners, interesting situations, at the same time no one eye-opening historical education for the reader who is that eager to learn.
Review #4
Audio Lord’s Captain by John Chancer
1st, as a story this is that not one of the stronger books in the television series. I was knowledgeable with the mutinies of 1797 at the same time still found it a little sour. But, for you will wish to read this book as that are no one developments in Lewrie’s indefinite ashore that for you will need to be knowledgeable with.
The biggest problem will that the beginning of the novel is that actually at the back of the book, right behind the Afterword. I was already several chapters into the book when I watched no one of the
Reviews here at the same time found the problem. Should for you take this book, barely be convinced to flip through to the real beginning of the story. I will be writing Amazone at the same time have hope they or issue an refreshed Kindle version of, unlikely, issue a credit.
Review #5
Free audio Lord’s Captain – in the audio player below
Alan Lewrie, at the finish of the continue novel (Jester’s Good luck), was withdrawing from the Adriatic as part of the English withdrawal from the Mediterranean in belated 1796. This story skips forward at the same time begins with the Fight of Cape St. Vincent in premature 1797. Admiral Jervis is that depicted out of disposition, praising Lewrie without promoting him. Jervis had the authority to promote officers he approved of at the same time would have immediately done so if he approved of Lewrie. The true indefinite Peter Puget acquired such a promotion from Jervis, even though he arrived right behind the fight (Puget was understandable from earlier accomplishments).
Right behind a return to Great britain to shackles the Jester into the dockyard, at the same time a reconciliation between Lewrie at the same time his dad, the head part of this novel deals with the mutiny at the Nore right behind Lewrie is that promoted at the same time takes command of a frigate. He is that confronted by an old adversary he cannot identify, at the same time a crew split between mutineers at the same time committed guys. The story contains little action at sea – when Lewrie is that not on earth, he is that mainly aboard ship at anchor dealing with the mutineers. A side issue appears when anyone writes a poison pen letter revealing Lewrie’s past indiscretions. Overall, the novel is that more about personalities than about naval action. It covers a relatively short period of time in 1797.
For novels more action-filled, covering similar time period (many of which the mutiny), the reader is that referred to Richard Woodman’s, “A Lord’s Cutter,” at the same time C. Northcote Parkinson’s, “The Fireship.”