I've been reading this series in chronological order and so far they've been pretty good. I can't summarize or even remember the plot because this series is like a TV series and the episodes all run on each other. Bolitho is just sent on one mission after another. In this book he's sent to the Spanish Main.
Another reason is that I've been reading all the Hornblower clones this year and I must have read 20-30 naval historical fiction books and the characters all visit the same locales: Caribbean, Mediterranean, Baltic, Atlantic, etc. and even be at the same events: Battle of the Nile, Trafalgar, Copenhagen, Cape Town, etc. So all the stories are somewhat mixed up in my head now.
One thing I can say is that all of the series start strong but lose their way and it's also somewhat true of this series. What I like about this series is that it's easy to read and follow. I think Kent does a great job of the action scenes and spends a lot of time on the characters. The relationships between the characters are quite well done. The action scenes are very vivid and Kent doesn't pull any punches when it comes to realism and carnage.
The problem as the series matures are these:
1) The hero worship. Lately it's gotten as bad as Ramage where basically everyone he comes in contact with either professes his admiration for him aloud for anyone in proximity to hear or sotto voce to himself. And as another reviewer said: their goal in life seems to be to line up to lay down their lives for him. Frankly this is cringy and just bad writing. They're all basically aping Hornblower but CS Forester does a much better job. If you have to convince readers by having the characters say they admire Bolitho every few pages then you're not doing a good job - write it so that we feel it, not read it through dialog.
2) The romance: I don't know why Kent has put it into his head that readers read this series for romance. Again, I feel it's because of Hornblower's affairs and an effort to better him. But in this case Kent is a horrible romance writer. Characters meet for 2 seconds and pledge their undying love for each other, totally without any chemistry.
Spoilers here: Bolitho married Belinda but fell for Kate. We're supposed to feel that Belinda changed and has become unworthy of being Bolitho's wife and that we sympathize with Bolitho and agree with his affair. But I don't. Kent hasn't done enough character differentiation that I feel any difference between the two female characters. They feel exactly the same to me.
This is supposed to mimic Nelson's affair with Emma Hamilton. But all I feel is that Bolitho cast away a faithful wife because he got besotted with someone else. With all the time Kent put into this dumb subplot, this book might as well be subtitled Sir Richard thinks with his benis. This drama is totally unconvincing and a waste of time. I don't care about who Bolitho sleeps with and just fast read through this garbage.
If Kent had removed the romance and dialed down the hero worship, this would have been a much better book. Not as good as Hornblower, but still better than the other clones. As Hornblower famously said to Bush: what are we, actors? These characters are not just actors but bad actors. Anyway, on to the next book!