The American colonies, 1775—on the cusp of the American Revolution. Captain Isaac Biddlecomb onboard his beloved ship Judea is nearing the end of a successful voyage of buying an illicit cargo of molasses and smuggling it into Rhode Island. He knows all the inlets and shoals, which will allow him to avoid British revenue cutters. But just as he's almost home, His majesty's frigate Rose appears and gives him chase. Bittlecomb can't outrun her. Desperate to save his crew, he plows Judith onto the rocks of Narragansett Bay, destroying his cargo but allowing his crew to safely abandon ship and escape capture.
But the Rose's captain knows Biddlecomb captained the Judea. He sails into Bristol Harbor and sends in men to capture him. Biddlecomb has one choice: sign on as an ordinary seaman under an assumed identity onboard a merchant ship that's about to sail out of port. His good friend, Ezra Rumstick, signs on with him.
That's when Biddlecomb's real problems begin. The captain of the HMS brig Icarus, stops stops the ship and impresses Biddlecomb, Rumstick, and a third man. Welcome to a sailor's hell! Turns out, the captain is a sadistic, ruthless tyrant who likes to brutalize his crew for pleasure. The crew is surly and have divided loyalties. Can Bittlecomb persuade them to mutiny? If he does, will a mutiny succeed? If it should succeed, the Rose is lurking nearby to put an end to both the mutinous ship and Bittlecomb.
By Force of Arms is the first installment in James L. Nelson's Revolution at Sea series. It was a delightful read. One part of the pleasure was the characters and plot, which kept me on the edge of my seat. Another part was the authenticity of Nelson's descriptions of both shipboard life and sailing square-rigged merchant ships and ships of war. Turns out, Nelson himself is a certified square rig sailor. So you can be sure his descriptions are accurate, not only of sailing but of the sea and everything connected with it.
Five-star rating for a five-star adventure!