Shortlisted for Book of the Month
AMAZON UK £3.83
AMAZON US
$5.18
AMAZON CA $6.39
Nautical
Napoleonic Wars 1800s
A Sloop of War is the second installment in Philip Allan's
thoroughly rollicking
"Alexander Clay" Napoleonic-era nautical series. It brings just as much
excitement and attention to historical detail as the first volume, The
Captain’s Nephew, with more nuanced character development as the author
adds to his already considerable writing craft and storytelling confidence.
These are not the two-dimensional characters often found in lesser examples
from this historical fiction subgenre. They are flesh-and-blood men and women,
full of crushing anxieties,
wild desires, and often
shockingly poor judgement, that draw you into their stories.
Allan continues with his deliberate development of his before-the-mast
characters, bringing the tangled issue of slavery into the lives of the tars
through introduction of a throughly intriguing black sailor who is a runaway
slave from a Barbadian sugar plantation. This complex man, Abel Sedgewick,
holds the promise of much interesting development in later volumes,
particularly since we’re treated to a subplot concerning the anti-slavery
ship’s surgeon, Mr. Linfield, and the younger daughter of a Scots-Barbadian
planter with rather progressive ideas on the economic inefficiencies of chattel
slavery. The author even lets drop a mention of the great abolitionist, William
Wilberforce, so no telling where this thread might lead now that he’s started
pulling on it.
One of the perennial challenges in writing Age of Sail stories seems to
be providing believable female characters. (I recall in the entire 138 minutes
of the excellent 2003 film version of Master and Commander, there are
exactly two women onscreen for perhaps 15 seconds—in a dinghy trying to sell
fresh fruit alongside HMS Surprise.) So far, Mr. Allan has done a
commendable job crafting interesting women and imbuing them within strong
storylines. There are no seams showing yet from stitching in the ladies, and I
trust in the author’s manifest skill to keep things taut and tidy going
forward.
Alexander Clay is, of course, back as his tactically brilliant,
swashbuckling, headstrong, and rather socially inept self. You can't help but
alternately cheer for and scratch your head over Mr. Allan’s protagonist... and I'm confident that's exactly as intended. Many of
the more interesting junior officers and ratings are back, including Clay’s
loyal best friend, Lieutenant Sutton, and The Captain’s Nephew nemesis,
Lieutenant Windham. And of course, there’s enough sea and land combat to slake
the martial thirst of the most discerning maritime fiction reader.
If I was forced to find a deficiency—and I shock myself even writing
this—the book might have been a little longer. Although at 326 pages A Sloop
of War is hardly a novella, I felt a little shortchanged. On the other
hand, we’re treated with a deft touch to any number of cliffhangers, major and
minor, for the third volume and beyond. So we’ve hardly heard the last of
Alexander Clay.
© Jeffrey K. Walker
click here to return to home page 'Bookshelf' then scroll down for more items of interest
No comments:
Post a Comment
We do not accept comments. If you need to contact Discovering Diamonds go to the CONTACT facility
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.