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Book Three of the Reluctant Adventures of Lieutenant Martin Jerrold August, 1806. When you have just offended some of the most powerful men in England there are two you can stand firm, or you can run.
Which is why Martin Jerrold soon finds himself sailing away across the Atlantic Ocean as fast as the wind can carry him.
In the employ of Britain's Secret Office, Jerrold is sent to America on a simple mission. With serious rumors of a threatening conspiracy brewing, the government is in desperate need of help and Jerrold is their man. His task is infiltrate the conspirators and stop them at all costs.
Leaving the shores of England, his journey will take him across pirate-infested seas, through the American wilderness, and down the mighty Mississippi River. Enemies are ranged against him---agents of Spain and America are trying to kill him, and the plotters are growing suspicious of his intentions. Then there is the lovely Miss Lyell, who seems to have her own plans for Lieutenant Jerrold.
His instructions ring in his find out what the conspirators intend and stop it. But as each bumbling step takes Jerrold further into danger, he slowly realizes that his very presence within the conspiracy could be the spark that ignites a disastrous war between England and America.
The stakes are high---the entire future of Britain's war against Napoleon rests in his not-so-capable hands. One wrong move and the consequences would be catastrophic, even by Jerrold's own lamentable standards.
Having earned praise as a "robust storyteller," Edwin Thomas once again creates fun, humor, and misadventure in Lieutenant Martin Jerrold and his sea-to-shore antics in this thrilling third book in his delightful series. Praise for The Chains of Albion

"Thomas is a robust storyteller, with a shipshape plot that would please any mariner. Fast-moving, suspenseful fun." --- Kirkus Reviews

" The Chains of Albion is a cracking book. Fast paced, exciting, and funny."
---Conn Iggulden, author of the bestselling Emperor series

"[ The Chains of Albion ] will fill the gaping hole stoved in the timbers of the sea-saga genre by the sad death of Patrick O'Brian. . . . Jerrold swashes his buckles and splices his mainbraces to good effect." --- Scotland on Sunday

"Rip roaring . . . a rollicking yarn with razor-sharp dialogue, introducing a hilarious protagonist." --- Good Book Guide

Praise for The Blighted Cliffs

"This is a great book, exciting and utterly unique. Thomas has created in Lieutenant Martin Jerrold someone whom the reader of nautical fiction has never seen before---a character we love despite ourselves, and despite his many faults. For the lover of naval fiction, historical fiction, mysteries, this book has it all." ---James L. Nelson, author of Reign of The Story of the First Battling Ironclads, the Monitor and the Merrimack and the Revolution at Sea Saga

"Well-researched, charmingly outrageous debut. Enchanted readers loath to say bon voyage will impatiently await the sequel."
--- Publishers Weekly

336 pages, Hardcover

First published April 3, 2006

37 people want to read

About the author

Edwin Thomas

16 books10 followers
Aka Tom Harper

Edwin Thomas grew up in West Germany, Belgium and America before returning to England to study history at Lincoln College, Oxford. His conclusion to the short story 'Death by the Invisible Hand' was published in The Economist in 1997, and the first chapter of The Blighted Cliffs was runner-up in the 2001 Crime Writers' Association Début Dagger Award for new fiction. The first two installments of the adventures of Martin Jerrold, The Blighted Cliffs and The Chains of Albion, are available in Bantam paperback.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Clemens Schoonderwoert.
1,361 reviews131 followers
January 23, 2022
**Should Read as 4.5 Stars!**

Read this book in 2006, and its the 3rd part of the "Lieutenant Martin Jerrold" series.

Its August, AD 1806, and after his somewhat hopeless last adventure and thus offending the most powerful men in England, there's only one way out and that's to set sail to America for the British Secret Service, for there's a rumour of a conspiracy in America.

Over in America, after crossing the wilderness and down the mighty Mississippi river, Martin Jerrold must try to discover what this conspiracy is all about.

Agents from America and Spain are ranged against Martin Jerrold, and they are trying to kill him even though he has to try to infiltrate the American camp and find out what they are up to.

There's also a Miss Lyell who has her own plans for Lieutenant Martin Jerrold, and the further Jerrold investigates the more danger he will ignite in a possible war between America and England.

What is to follow is a wonderful adventure, in which clumsy Martin Jerrold, the anti-hero, will do his best to succeed in his mission but due to his misfortune only manages to ignite a certain hostility that will turn into a near disaster for him and his country, but in the end he will somehow manage the situation by saving himself from this humiliation and almost certain death.

Highly recommended, for this is another splendid addition to this great little series, and that's why I like to call this episode: "A Glorious Treason's River"!
Profile Image for Ian Racey.
Author 1 book11 followers
June 24, 2021
Jerrold is a character well suited to being written into Burr’s farcical conspiracy, since Burr’s plot was always ridiculous and never had a chance of achieving anything except in the minds of its leaders, but the men opposing him—chiefly, of course, Thomas Jefferson—so convinced that he was on the verge of success that they persecuted him viciously and with the full power of the state. People familiar with Burr’s story will encounter many of the actual historical figures involved—Samuel Ogden, Anthony Merry, Comfort Tyler, Harman & Margaret Blannerhasset, Moses Hook & of course James Wilkinson—but to people who aren’t experts on the topic they’ll come across as colorful fictional characters whose eccentricities clearly mark them out as tailored to the style of a Jerrold story. Burr is treated, I would say, pretty accurately for what his mindset probably was at the time. My one quibble would be it being treated as a great secret that James Wilkinson was a Spanish spy; the great weirdness of Wilkinson is that he could be commander in chief of the US Army under four successive presidents, of both parties, while it was in fact common knowledge that he was a paid Spanish agent. But I think in general that Wilkinson’s appearance here is so brief that it’s a case of Thomas feeling a necessity to include him—I certainly would, in his place—without being able to find an opportunity to give him the treatment he deserves.
Profile Image for Gouty.
72 reviews18 followers
August 18, 2007
This is the last in the Martin Jerrold series. It sees poor martin dispatched to the wilds of America where he must foil Aaron Burr’s mad scheme to invade Mexico. It is a good fun read about an event in American history which is not taught in many history courses.
Profile Image for D.w..
Author 12 books25 followers
December 12, 2009
Martin is not our typical hero. Misadventure and calamity abound and Jerrold comes out on top. Well worth the read. There should be more in this series. At the end of this book we find that Martin is someone whom respect should adhere to, and he is ever maturing as a naval officer.
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