Douglas Skelton has written a history book, with all the colourful prose and flow of an adventure novel. The 18th century life of Peter Williamson (1730-1799) was exactly that though. It was said that Robert Louis Stevenson's character of David Balfour in 'Kidnapped' was inspired by the adventures of Williamson from his book 'French and Indian Cruelty' published in 1758.
Peter Williamson was kidnapped, aged 13, in Aberdeen and then shipped to the American colonies to be sold into servitude. He survived a shipwreck before being bought by a wealthy Pennsylvania planter. Eventually becoming free and marrying, he worked his own farm on the forks of the Delaware, now Northampton County. Captured by natives and taken back to their camp, he was a kidnapped slave once more.
Eventually he escaped, found his wife had died, and joined the militia and fought in the French/Indian wars, before being captured as a prisoner of war. He was shipped back to England and returned to his native Scotland, to settle in Edinburgh.
He became a writer, publisher, publican, entrepreneur. I always say that truth is far more amazing than fiction, here is the proof.