From Publishers Weekly
In this robust sequel to A Sailor of Austria, young Lieutenant Otto Prohaska of the Austro-Hungarian navy continues to narrate his adventures during the early years of this century, as he careens across Eastern Europe and parts of Asia, buffeted by lovely ladies, tyrannical lords and world events. Prohaska volunteers for flight training only to be shot down over a royal picnic, allowing him to spend time with both the Kaiser and Archduke Ferdinand, the latter of whom will shortly be assassinated, plunging Europe into WWI. When a lusty lady intrigues him, he finds himself in danger of execution. Up one mountain and down the next, by air, land and sea, the doughty lad wends his way, enduring shipwreck, pirates, battle and a Turkish dungeon. Skillfully mixing derring-do with tragedy as well as stringent wit, Biggins offers a vivid catalogue of world history 1909-1918. Sometimes there is so much history, in fact, that Prohaska seems more like a teaching aid than a living character, but overall this is engaging fare-reminiscent of George M. Fraser's Flashman series, but darker-that is likely to increase Biggins's following.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Booklist
Most who have heard of the imperial and royal Austro-Hungarian navy know it only in connection with Baron von Trapp's premusical career as a successful submarine captain. So Biggins set sail on a voyage into the fairly unknown by inaugurating a series of novels about an Austro-Hungarian naval officer. But he has launched a very fine vessel, indeed. This book, second in the series, deals with Oscar Prohaska's career from the summer of 1913 through early 1915. During that time, he learns to fly, is injured in a crash, serves aboard a monitor on the Danube, becomes involved with the Serbian conspiracy that launched World War I, makes his way across Bosnia, is exiled to China, and finally wends his way back from the Orient. This not only keeps him busy, but will thoroughly engross readers. Biggins writes with a fine sense of the sea and of history and a truly marvelous wit. Britannia may no longer rule the waves, but her writers are definitely the best tellers of sea stories.
Roland Green
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