"Throughout the ship men began to prepare for battle, spreading stories and opinions about the French ships as they went. The surgeon and his assistants started to move instruments and supplies from the sick berth down to the midshipmen's quarters on the orlop. A methodical man, who knew a little medicine and a lot of surgery, Wilson laid out and inspected his tools at leisure, while his loblolly boys checked needles and horsehair, gags, turpentine, and tow needed for the inevitable operations."
Plot: A British Naval captain takes a mixed crew protecting a convoy from England bound for the South Atlantic. They must pass through the English Channel and down the west coast of Europe where England is at war with France. The crew needs to mesh in order for the assignment to succeed. Many small things do not go right and the mission is put in jeopardy.
Ship to ship battles were the spicy sauce of the conflicts between France and England during the late 18th and early 19th century. There was probably no greater author than Patrick O’Brian in making use of that era as background for his Aubrey-Maturin novels. But those novels were not primarily about history (though they don’t distort what was going on).
His Majesty’s Ship is all about the details. The plot (which culminates in a magnificently detailed battle at sea) is secondary. If I were at a point where I was considering dipping my toe in the sea of Napoleonic Era naval fiction, I would choose this book to begin. No author, not O’Brian, not Forester, sets this stage better than Bond. I thoroughly enjoyed the details of life aboard a British Navy ship. Every detail of mess, bedding, skylarking, surgery, battle, etc. is set out clearly and in great detail. Every role from new recruit to captain is explored and given its due.
Perhaps a shade below 5 stars - highly enjoyable. My thanks to V.E. Ulett for pointing me in this direction.