Improbable but Entertaining
Jacob Fletcher, the hero of this series, launches into another wild adventure, protesting the whole time that he really wants to be a merchant and not a naval officer. He finds a sponsor who is a spymaster and gets him promoted for a daring attack on French soil in the time when Napoleon is just getting ready to roll through Italy. The action is superbly integrated with actual history with a few characters, like Lord Howe, who really commanded a British fleet that won a stunning victory over the French and it really was on June 1. But many ships’ names are clearly made up, such as the 3 frigates named after the banks of oars on a trireme. While it’s true that early steam engineers tried to develop a steam carriage this was somewhat later and it wasn’t successful compared to an engine on rails, so I am skeptical that the Scottish traitors who tried to introduce steam power into revolutionary France could have a basis in fact.
I was a little disappointed that Lady Coignwood, a superb villain in the previous books of the series, does not appear at all. Can it be that mr Drake is going to let her usurp Fletcher’s inheritance? While characterization of the hero motivates him to not want the fortune, still I hoped he would deprive Lady Sarah of it somehow.
But despite these problems the book is shockingly addictive with plots within plots. The background is right for Napoleonic times and the action is nonstop on land and sea. The way the author tells the story is first person as an old man nearing his 100th birthday, dictating it to a scholarly assistant whose initials we get to know well as, writing shortly after Fletchers death, he inserts both snide and helpful comments in square brackets. This gives the tale a certain Victorian feel which is appropriate somehow. But when reading the first book it’s possible to imagine the story was fact based, it’s clear from subsequent books that Jacob Fletcher is a fictional character and somewhat less believable than Horatio Hornblower. It doesn’t matter. The story is a delight for anyone at all interested in the period.