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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
THE HORNBLOWER COMPANION by C. S. Forester,
By thepaxdomini "The Book Review" (Tulsa, OK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Hornblower Companion: An Atlas and Personal Commentary on the Writing of the Hornblower Saga (Mass Market Paperback)
The Hornblower Companion: An Atlas and Personal Commentary on the Writing of the Hornblower Saga, with Illustrations and Maps by Samuel Bryant (1964) - well, that about sums it up. This book was published after the ten complete Hornblower novels, but before C. S. Forester began writing Hornblower During the Crisis.The first half of The Hornblower Companion includes thirty maps that detail each of Hornblower's adventures, with locations of key events highlighted, and with commentary by Forester on each facing page. There are plenty of spoilers here, so first-time readers of the Hornblower novels should not plan to follow along with these maps. Throughout this section, Forester celebrates how he has made Hornblower one of the luckiest characters in literature. He repeatedly refers to events resulting in Hornblower's success as "convenient" and "fortunate", and in defense of his contrived plots only says that if "ordinary rules" applied to Hornblower there would be no Hornblower stories (that is most certainly true). Forester never met a convenient coincidence he didn't like. The second half of the book contains Forester's notes on writing. He describes how the idea for Hornblower originated, how each novel developed, and how his many health problems affected the process; he also details his writing methods. A pattern appears - nearly every Hornblower novel was planned to be the last one Forester wrote. The notes make some similarities between Hornblower and Forester himself rather obvious - the constant dissatisfaction with life is the main thing; Hornblower has also inherited a number of Forester's mannerisms. These notes also highlight just what a good job Forester did fitting Hornblower's chronology together (since he wrote them out of sequence) with relatively few inconsistencies. Astonishingly, mind-bogglingly, Forester says, "In my opinion the story about Hornblower and St. Elizabeth of Hungary...is the best story I have ever written". "St. Elizabeth of Hungary" from Hornblower in the West Indies - that excruciating, predictable, contrived, hackneyed, deux ex machina-ridden, facepalm-inducing story. What on earth does he like about it? Forester never quite says; in any event it is obvious from this and other passages that Forester is utterly unable to evaluate his writing objectively. Hornblower fans who are geographically challenged and anyone curious about the writing process will find The Hornblower Companion of interest. Certainly it is illuminating to get Forester's take on things.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A must for readers and writers,
By
This review is from: The Hornblower Companion: An Atlas and Personal Commentary on the Writing of the Hornblower Saga (Mass Market Paperback)
C.S. Forester, The Hornblower Companion (1964). The first edition I have in front of me has become very collectible and pricey. Fortunately, it has been reprinted in paperback, a used copy of which can be had for a few dollars (or pounds).This is a wonderful book. No, actually two wonderful books. The subtitle says it all: An Atlas and Personal Commentary on the Writing of the Hornblower Saga, with Illustrations and Maps by Samuel Bryant. The first part of the book consists of thirty detailed maps covering HH's entire naval career, with a paragraph or two of commentary and analysis. The maps and the margins of their facing pages are adorned with Bryant's exquisite pen-and-ink drawings. He does a masterful job illustrating both ships and people. The pleasure of examining these little gems never seems to fail. Forester modestly entitles the remainder of the book, some 90 pages, Some Personal Notes. Forester opens his mind to us and describes the writing process in real depth, discussing how he gets ideas, how they come together in to books, his writing regimen, and the writing/publishing history of the Hornblower books. Absolutely fascinating. And, I should think, required reading for all contemporary writers of Historic Naval Fiction. This book is a must for both readers and writers of HNF. |
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The Hornblower Companion: An Atlas and Personal Commentary on the Writing of the Hornblower Saga by C. S Forester (Mass Market Paperback - 1974)
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