Afghanistan '11
Games
App Watch
The year is 2011, you are commanding the US army operations in Afghanistan. But contrary to the...
games
Memoirs of an Addicted Brain: A Neuroscientist Examines His Former Life on Drugs
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Marc Lewis's relationship with drugs began in a New England boarding school where, as a bullied and...
Nemesis: The First Iron Warship and Her World
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The Nemesis was the first of a generation of iron-clad, steam-powered naval vessels that established...
Classical Victorians: Scholars, Scoundrels and Generals in Pursuit of Antiquity
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Victorian Britain set out to make the ancient world its own. This is the story of how it failed. It...
El Chapo [Audiobook]
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Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán is one of the highest-profile narco-terrorists the world has ever seen....
Murder, Mutiny & Mayhem: The Blackest-Hearted Villains from Irish History
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The Blackest-Hearted Villains from Irish History The Irish are celebrated at home and abroad as...
The Resurrectionist
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It's 1820, and the physicians of London are on fire to unlock the secrets of human anatomy, some...
Historical Fiction Gothic Horror
Goddess in the Stacks (553 KP) rated Cinnamon and Gunpowder: A Novel in Books
Sep 19, 2018
The formatting is set up as a kind of personal ship's log, each part dated and written down after the events happen. Wedgwood (or "Spoons," as the crew calls him) even mentions how he hides it and leaves out a decoy log, since he also writes down his dreams (and plans!) of escaping the pirates.
Some of the events in the book are incredibly predictable, but there are still a few surprises. I was a little disappointed when one thing in particular happened; I saw it coming but hoped that wasn't where the author was going with it. I know that's vague, but I don't want to spoil anything!
I enjoyed learning about Mad Hannah's background and why she's a pirate; she's fighting against the opium trade, and she actually gives Wedgwood a pretty accurate summary of the terrible things the opium trade was responsible for.
Any book that can combine sumptuous description of exotic meals with action and cannonballs will have my attention. And Brown does not shy away from proper action scenes. These are pirates, and fights get brutal. Men lose limbs if not their lives to storms and Navy bombardments. Keeping order on a pirate ship involves lashings and brute force. The book doesn't shrink from those, but it also gets philosophical with Wedgwood's description of flavors, and almost comedic with the images of using cannonballs as pestles for grinding herbs. It's that contrast and variety that makes this book so much fun to read.
You can find all my reviews at http://goddessinthestacks.com
Gunsmoke - OTRWesterns.com
Podcast
Gunsmoke was a long-running old-time radio and television Western drama program set in Dodge City,...
King Norodom's Head: Phnom Penh Sights Beyond the Guidebooks
Book
King Norodom's Head deals with sights of Phnom Penh rarely found in guidebooks. This is not,...