A Scion of Heroes: The World of Captain James Murray
Book
This fast-moving narrative, taking place in the Regency era, brings to life contemporary issues of...
The Little Demon
Ronald Wilks, Fyodor Sologub and Pamela Davidson
Book
A dark classic of Russia's silver age, this blackly funny novel recounts a schoolteacher's descent...
Eyes All Over the Sky: Aerial Reconnaissance in the First World War
Book
After the first successful flight by the Wright brothers in 1903, the age of aviation was born, and...
AirFighters Pro - Combat Flight Simulator
Games and Navigation
App
THE MOST ADVANCED FIGHTER PLANE COMBAT AND FLIGHT SIMULATOR Realistic world maps and navigation,...
Operation Mincemeat: How a Dead Man and a Bizarre Plan Fooled the Nazis and Assured an Allied Victory
Book
In 1943, from a windowless basement office in London, two brilliant intelligence officers conceived...
ClareR (5721 KP) rated The Kingdoms in Books
Mar 6, 2022
Basically (and I warn you: there’s nothing basic about this storyline!), Joe Tournier finds himself at a London train station, and realises that he doesn’t know how he got there, or who he is. A kind stranger takes him to the hospital where he’s diagnosed with amnesia. After a week at an asylum, his owner and his wife come to claim him. His French owner. He is a slave in Londres, which is occupied by the French after they won the Napoleonic Wars. But none of this feels right to him.
A month or so later, he receives a postcard written in illegal English, from a lighthouse in rebel Scotland - written 100 years ago. After gaining his freedom as a slave, Joe becomes an engineer, and is sent to the same lighthouse to make repairs. And that’s all I’ll say, because I really don’t want to spoil the story. I will say that there’s some jumping around in time, and it shows that if you change a small thing in the past, there can be huge ramifications in the future.
I loved the characters, the plot, the setting - just everything about it really appealed to me. I can’t say as I’ve read many books set mainly on boats, naval or otherwise. The rules and the running of the ships were really interesting, and the sea battles were gripping.
It’s a fabulous book, and I’d most definitely recommend it. Thanks to The Pigeonhole for the serialisation!
Jane Austen's Country Life
Book
Jane Austen lived for nearly all her life in two Hampshire villages: for 25 years in her birthplace...
Kristina Rihanoff: Dancing Out of Darkness: My Story
Book
Kristina was born in 1977 in Vladivostok, East Russia, a bleak naval town closed to foreigners under...
Nelson: Love and Fame
Book
The story of Horatio Nelson's life - his naval glory, public fame, charismatic leadership,...
The Meaning of Rice: And Other Tales from the Belly of Japan
Book
"The next Bill Bryson." (New York Times). In this often hilarious yet deeply researched book, food...