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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Unusual Setting and Theme for a Classic Naval Yarn!, August 17, 1999
This highly enjoyable novel features perhaps the most unusual setting and theme of any of the classic naval adventures by Kent, Forrester or O'Brien. The action takes place in the brief period of peace between the end of the American War of Independence and the start of the French Revolutionary Wars, while the location, the Pacific, is far from the arenas in which the British, French and other major navies normally waged their battles. Captain Richard Bolitho is nevertheless confronted with a daunting series of challenges. Characters from earlier novels, including Bolitho's secret love Viola, also have their roles, usually painful and demanding, to play. The descriptions of encounters with Polynesian Islanders are both convincing and obviously founded on sound research. The same applies to the description of the infant colony of New South Wales - indeed one marvels that in the short two centuries since the major nation of Australia has arisen so quickly on such a shaky foundation. The most memorable event of the story, a gruelling ocean passage in an open boat, is closely modelled on Bligh of the Bounty's epic journey in the same waters, is so well described that the reader feels uncomfortable while perusing it! On the whole, a most enjoyable novel in the Bolitho saga and well worth reading.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
5 Pacific Paradises Plundered, October 23, 2000
Passage to Mutiny is the fourth Kent novel set outside of an actual war and the fourth that deals with pirates. In the past Richard Bolitho has ultimately enjoyed great success against pirates while Kent has had mixed success writing about it. This time Kent gets it right in a nail biting, blood and thunder epic. Perhaps Kent's Bolitho adventures reached their peak in the mid-70s and Passage to Mutiny is an example of the writer in top form. Five years after Command a King's Ship Bolitho is off to Botany Bay. The spectre of two famous captains, Cook and Bligh, hangs over the voyage. Cook explored much of the region and was ultimately killed in the Pacific and Bligh has just lost his ship to mutiny. While he may have fears of mutiny, Kent's Bolitho has both the leadership abilities and humanity of Cook and the seafaring ability of Bligh. His crews will stand with him to the death. Bolitho's paramour and nemesis from Command a King's Ship are both back to complete the story that Kent started in the earlier novel. While reading Command a King's Ship I was thinking that Bolitho should back off from having a relationship with a married woman no matter what her husband is like, Kent had me thinking that Bolitho should go for it and squeeze whatever happiness he could out of the opportunity that he had. However, Passage to Mutiny is really about broadsides, thwarting pirates and a great sailing epic. The romance is just a little fluff along the way while manly men do manly things. The story is exciting and succeeds on that level. I did have a few problems with it though. Kent is not always clear on details such as how the wind is blowing, what direction the shore is and the way ports face. He really should include maps or provide additional details so that the reader can visualize what's happening accurately. One can't always figure out why Bolitho is so brilliant if one doesn't know which way the wind is blowing and which direction the ship is sailing. Still and all I was wrapped up in this one and I look forward to the next Bolitho adventure.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Adventures of the Tempest, 36-gun frigate, December 28, 2003
Richard Bolitho's new command is the Tempest, a 36-gun frigate, built in India of teak. a fifth class like his last command. But teak is a very heavy, dense wood; much heavier than the English oak usually used in the construction of ships of the Royal Navy, and therefor less maneuverable--but exceptionally strong. The Tempest is picked up in the story entering the harbor at Sydney, the main port of the prison colony of Botany Bay (now known as Australia.) The Commodore to whom he reports is an old friend with whom he served when they were both lieutenants. But another old acquaintance was also arriving soon from England: the government advisor, James Raymond and his wife Viola, with whom Bolitho had fallen in love on the last occasion of their company, five years previously. The story continues through attacks by the pirate Mathias Tuke, broadsides, shore parties, a long sea episode in an open boat, hostile savages, and the loss of many good friends and crew members in battler and from fever, and the near loss of Bolito's own life. This is a fine novel, as is typical of Alexander Kent, and the seventh in the Bolitho series. I have ordered the next three in the series, so taken by the stories am I. Joseph (Joe) Pierre, USN(Ret)
author of Handguns and Freedom...their care and maintenance and other books
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