English Country House Interiors
Book
A highly detailed look at the English country house interior, offering unprecedented access to...
Time's Convert
Book
From the Sunday Times Number One bestselling author of A Discovery of Witches, soon to be a major...
Basilius Besler's Florilegium: The Book of Plants
Klaus Walter Littger and Werner Dressendorfer
Book
Botanical beauty: Basilius Besler's complete Hortus Eystettensis of 1613 A magnificent pictorial...
The Paris Mistress
Book
Summer 1781. Passy, France. George Washington's two least likely spies for liberty, Rebecca Parcell...
Phil Leader (619 KP) rated A Certain Threat (Merriman Chronicles #1) in Books
Nov 11, 2019
What follows is a cracking story that combines Naval adventure in the age of sail with investigation into the mystery around the loss of the Custom ship. Merriman is a strong lead character, a capable officer who looks after his men as best he can at a time when the navy was hard and brutal work, with many seamen ending up dead or injured on even the most routine missions. He is also relentless and imaginative, using the information and resources at his disposal to maximum effect to uncover the true purpose of the smugglers.
Burnage shows tremendous ability in his writing. The tone and dialogue feel very authentic, the characters well drawn and memorable. Every scene drives the plot forward or builds Merriman's character and there is a real sense of momentum and drama in the story. The descriptions of the naval encounters are a real highlight, exciting but clearly showing the danger that existed at the time, as well as the skill required by every member of the crew to ensure victory in any engagement.
Overall this was a terrific book and I would recommend it to readers of any age as a thrilling story. An easy 5 stars and an introduction to what promises to be a thrilling series.
Making it Happen: Fred Goodwin, RBS and the Men Who Blew Up the British Economy
Book
When RBS collapsed and had to be bailed out by the taxpayer in the financial crisis of October 2008...
WorldScales
Music and Reference
App
Not all scales are created equal. This app allows you to break out of the limitations of...
Abraham Hanibal: Prince of Logone, Pushkin's African Ancestor
Book
Hanibal [1697- 1761] was probably the most outstanding African in Europe in the 18th Century, his...
War with Russia: An Urgent Warning from Senior Military Command
Book
'You fail to read this book at your peril' - Admiral James G Stavridis, US Navy, former Supreme...
18th century Paris was a place of great uncertainty - and this book has echoes of Dickensian London. It’s so much more than that though. Not only do we get some wonderful descriptions of the sights, sounds and smells of Paris at the time, we also get to look at Edward Carey’s beautiful pictures. I say beautiful, they’re pictures that portray people in their sometimes beautiful ugliness (that’s a thing, right?).
The life that Little lives! I hadn’t known any of the background of Madame Tussaud, and to be honest, with the way her formative years went, I’m astonished that she survived to old age. The Paris of the French Revolution was a dangerous place, and Little had come to know some dangerous people.
I don’t want to say anything else. It would be a shame for me to reveal any of the (what were to me) big surprises. This is a startling, moving, frustrating, emotional, bizarre, glorious journey through the French years of Madame Tussaud’s life. It was recommended to me by book blogger @yearsofreading, and I’m so glad I listened to her. Now I recommend that if you haven’t read this book, and you’ve read my review this far, go out and read it. You won’t regret it!