Your previous knowledge of the savagely humble and simpleminded folk we know as pirates will be squelched after you finish reading this straightforward account of the not-so humble and simpleminded pirate, Blackbeard.
The author doesn't stop there: he goes on to describe and put in context other pirates and women pirates (dressed in drag, of course--he gives the obvious reason for their having gone to this length, which will confront the reader with contrary thinking when they think of the Elizabeth Swans of the pirate world), which include Samuel Bellamy, Anne Bonne, Henry Morgan, Captain Kidd, Henry Avery, and Mary Reade, just to name but a few.
But the star of this chronicle is Blackbeard, the craziest bloke commanding the high seas during the Golden Age of Piracy.
I love the chart of different Jolly Rogers (or if you like the French, Jolie Rouge) and the analysis of pirates in the movies (sometimes the older films didn't get it quite right, but that's to be expected, what with having to appeal to the masses and uphold the great tradition of Hollywoodizing everything).