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The Sea Warriors by Richard Woodman — book cover

The Sea Warriors

by Richard Woodman
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Overview

Extraordinary maritime heroes of the late 18th and early 19th centuries stride across these pages - some, like Warren, Pellew, Cochrane and Collingwood, are still renowned; others are almost unknown today, yet their brilliant exploits deserve to be pulled from under the long shadow of the greatest naval figure of all, Horatio Nelson. The Royal Navy's struggle is set against the political backdrop of the Napoleonic Wars and the sea war with America.

About the Author, Richard Woodman

Richard Woodman is the author of more than a dozen sea stories, most famously his Nathaniel Drinkwater series of historical novels, as well as several maritime histories. He lives in England.

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Editorials

Booknews

Woodman recounts the story of the late 18th- and early 19th-century British naval captains. He details the events of the war years, focusing on the blockading of enemy ports, the interception of trade, and the protection of British merchant ships. In addition to the heroics of battle, the monotony of sailing, the prevalence of disease, and outbreaks of mutiny are also discussed. Woodman is a former sailor, from a slightly later period. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Kirkus Reviews

A historical study of the fighting officers and sailors who served in Great Britain's powerful navy during the golden age of Admiral Horatio Nelson. Woodman, best known as an author of historical maritime novels (The Guineaman, 2000, etc.), seems a promising choice to produce a naval history of the Napoleonic Wars. Indeed, he demonstrates an impressive grasp of the era. This extraordinary knowledge of the English captains, ships, crews, tactics, and opponents produces a narrative full of authentic details that should help readers encounter this long-extinct age. The author constructs this quirky history of equal parts military biography, nautical adventure, and naval history. He focuses his writing on the age's most colorful characters, offering readers observations on the tactical audacity and individual courage of captains like Horatio Nelson and Nisbet Willoughby against their French and American opponents. Between the resulting episodes of broadside cannon fire, exploding fire ships, and sea chases, Woodman pauses to describe the domestic life on the ships, teaching readers about such disparate subjects as the ravishes of scurvy and the monotony of sail trimming. He also finds the space to comment on social injustices, shedding light on the impressment of American merchant seamen, and the beatings and executions of sailors that damaged British recruiting and inspired the era's infamous mutinies. Too often, Woodman loses his narrative thread in this blizzard of data, making the history seem like a series of richly detailed but loosely stitched together research projects instead of a coherent history. For fans of Patrick O'Brian or C.S. Forester who crave true stories of highadventure in Nelson's navy—although many of those fans would be better served by numerous, more scholarly histories of the epoch that are readily available.

Book Details

Published
February 21, 2013
Publisher
Constable & Robinson
Pages
416
ISBN
9781780339245

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