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1330 pages, Kindle Edition
First published September 2, 2004
The jungle closed in on lofty banks, looking black and threatening beneath huge trees that shot up to reach the light and wove their crowns into an unbroken canopy… Large butterflies, moths and dragonflies flitted in the still moist air, and iridescent hummingbirds hovered busily before brilliant flowers. But for Nelson and his men there were rapids, falls, currents and countercurrents to absorb their attention, and the extremes between the exhausting daytime heat on the river and the falling temperatures that enveloped the makeshift camps at night to endure.I'll spare you the grisly details of an amputation at sea; they can be found on page 770. The historian is pulling his literary freight; you can't blame the author if his subject is so often devoid of activity. It is primarily for this reason that I’m now reading Sugden’s follow-up. In spinning Nelson’s extramarital affair with and child by the wife of the British Envoy to Naples contemporaneous with his stride into history over the hulls of Napoleon’s navy, Sugden should finally get to offer up a chronicle worthy of the chronicler.
