Friday, 17 August 2018

Patrick O'Brian - The Commodore


Rating: 5/5

Review:
The seventeenth in a brilliant series

This is now my third time reading through this brilliant series and I am reminded again how beautifully written and how wonderfully, addictively enjoyable they are.

In The Commodore, Jack and Steven’s personal affairs on land are, as so often, in some upheaval, but Jack is appointed Commodore of a squadron to suppress the slave trade off the East African coast and then to intercept and thwart a French squadron sent to raise rebellion in Ireland. It is another gripping and fascinating book, full of detail and with a compelling story.

Patrick O'Brian is steeped in the period of the early 19th Century and his knowledge of the language, manners, politics, social mores and naval matters of the time is deep and wide. Combined with a magnificent gift for both prose and storytelling, it makes something very special indeed. The books are so perfectly paced, with some calmer, quieter but still engrossing passages and some quite thrilling action sequences. O'Brian's handling of language is masterly, with the dialogue being especially brilliant, but also things like the way his sentences become shorter and more staccato in the action passages, making them heart-poundingly exciting. There are also laugh-out-loud moments and an overall sense of sheer involvement and pleasure in reading.

I cannot recommend these books too highly. They are that rare thing; fine literature which are also books which I can't wait to read more of. Wonderful stuff.

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