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Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Promising start,
By A reader in Michigan (Ann Arbor, MI) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kydd: A Naval Adventure (Hardcover)
It seems that everyone is writing a naval series these days. I know my paperboy started one and the guy at the video store looks to be publishing his third. It would seem then that you would have to be doing something pretty special to justify a new series -- especially when you consider the works of Forester and O'Brian. I think Stockwin is trying for something special, in part by setting this his first story in the ranks of common sailors, but also from taking the naval aspect of these stories very seriously. You do get a healthy sense of sea life in this tale, though you are often frustrated by the very limitations of this life. It is hard to get a bigger picture of things precisely because these sailors were largely in the dark. This sense that anything can happen out of the blue often gives the story a kind of disjointed feel, as if each episode is unconnected with the rest. Moreover, there are a lot of episodes. Despite this, and a sense that Stockwin is a much better observer of naval life than human character, the story was often gripping and the narrative never flagged. If you haven't read Patrick O'brian's novels, I would start there first before considering Kydd, but with the passing of O'brian and the Aubrey-Maturin series, Kydd warrants a serious look. I wish there were room for half-stars, because three and a bit seems right to me.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Hornblower fan,
By John Keenan (Omaha, NE) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kydd: A Naval Adventure (Hardcover)
I'm a Hornblower fan, but unlike so many others, I've never enjoyed Patrick O'Brian's naval books. (They are fine books, I know; for some reason, they just don't click with me.) So I was delighted to find "Kydd," a Napoleonic seafaring adventure, capturing my interest almost from the first page, as the hero is unhappily pressed into service in the Royal Navy. Unlike Hornblower, Kydd is a rankless landlubber, which enables Stockwin to provide a new and interesting perspective. Like the C.S. Forester novels, though, "Kydd" is fast-paced and interesting. This is a promising start to what one hopes will be a long series.
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Half excellent, half not,
By Bruce Trinque (Amston, CT United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Kydd: A Naval Adventure (Hardcover)
I find Julian Stockwin's novel "Kydd," the first in a projected series about the adventures of a Royal Navy seaman during the Napoleonic wars, to be a glass both half full and half empty. There are some aspects of the novel which were truly excellent. Stockwin has a detailed command of the physical aspects of the Royal Navy -- the ships, the implements and small duties of daily life, the sea itself, and he brings those physical aspects into vivid existence. When he wrote how a wave dashing against the hull of a ship sent water spurting through the narrow crack around the lid of a gunport, I realized that I had never thought of this happening but instantly recognized that his description was unmistakably true. Such descriptions of ships and the sea dominate the first half of "Kydd" and, at the halfway point, I was eager to read further. But ... The second half of the novel is much more given to characters and what is supposed to be an action-filled plot, and -- at least at this stage of his writing career -- Stockwin is no master of either. I found the minor characters unmemorable and one of the main characters, Nicholas Renzi, to be literally unbelievable. When he says, "Perhaps one day we will sail to the Orient -- I have a morbid desire to imbibe their metaphysics at the source," I personally have a morbid desire to throw away his thesaurus.Depite my reservations about the characters (and their often strained dialogue), I would still recommend "Kydd" to nautical novel enthusiasts. Read the first half slowly and revel in the intense physical world recreated, then scan the predictable plot turns of the second half more quickly. I will undoubtedly read the next novel in the series, "Artemus," and will hope that Julian Stockwin's skill as an author grows to meet the promise shown by the first half of "Kydd."
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