13 November 2014

Pasha - A Captain Kyyd seafaring adventure

Like all good seafaring heroes such as C. S. Forester’s Horatio Hornblower, and Patrick O’Brien’s Jack Aubrey, Julian Stockwin’s Thomas Kyyd has risen far in Britain’s naval forces. In Pasha we find Captain Kyyd has been made a Knight of the Bath thus overcoming his humble beginnings, becoming “a man of consequence.”  And to our further delight his closest friend Renzi has assumed the mantle of Earl of Farndon.  

 

We do not lose anything by all this elevation.  Rather Mr. Stockwin sends his heroes to the Dardanelles and Constantinople during the time of Napoleon’s attempts to break out of Europe in which he was trapped by the British navy. Looking East Bonaparte sought influence at the Court of the Ottoman Empire which would provide him with a land bridge allowing him unfettered access to India and beyond.  To this end he has sent Horace Sebastiani, a brilliant general and diplomat.

 

And around this historical happening we find our heroes in their usual roles but this time separated and each’s activities unknown to the other.  Captain Kyyd’s task is to break into the Dardanelles and Renzi’s to appear at the Ottoman Court as a flighty English scholar but to undermine Sebastiani’s influences. Mr. Stockwin has written an excellent adventure, his heroes have their usual human qualities which keep them from becoming insufferable and the reader can continue to admire them for their fortitude and skills.  And best of all Boney is foiled again.

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