Any Approaching Enemy: A Novel of the Napoleonic Wars
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| Any Approaching Enemy: A Novel of the Napoleonic Wars | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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With the stunning high-seas adventure Sails on the Horizon, Jay Worrall introduced a bold new hero in the rousing tradition of Jack Aubrey: Charles Edgemont, an ambitious officer in His Britannic Majesty’s navy. Raised to the rank of captain for gallantry under fire, Edgemont proved his mettle in the bruising British victory over the Spanish fleet at the Battle of St. Vincent. Now married and in command of the twenty-eight-gun frigate Louisa, the young captain sails toward a day of destiny–for himself and for England.
The year is 1798. The war between England and revolutionary France has reached a bloody stalemate, with England in the ascendancy at sea and France unchallenged on the Continent, thanks in large part to an unorthodox twenty-eight-year-old general named Napoleon Bonaparte. But the French, secretly amassing a powerful fleet, mean to break the impasse. When rumors of the French preparations leak, the Admiralty dispatches a squadron of seven ships–among them the Louisa–under the command of Rear Admiral Horatio Nelson to investigate. Blindsided by a storm of ferocious intensity, the ships scatter across the seas. After the storm subsides, the damaged frigates limp back to the rendezvous point. But there is no sign of Nelson’s flagship, Vanguard, nor of two other ships of the line. Edgemont fears that the pugnacious rear admiral has pressed on with the mission. Putting his career on the line by disobeying direct orders, Edgemont sets out in pursuit of Nelson and the French fleet on a treacherous voyage along the Tuscan coast. As tensions among the crew threaten to explode into open insubordination or worse, Edgemont makes an unexpected discovery in Naples that may seriously compromise his mission. When the missing French fleet turns up off the shores of Egypt, conveying an army tens of thousands strong, Edgemont is suddenly thrown into a crisis of conscience. As circumstances grow dire and require heroic action, the fate of the crucial battle effectively lies in Edgemont’s hands–as does the course of history. From the Hardcover edition. |
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| 07-23-08 | 2 | (NA) |
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If you love this genre, there are some aspects of this novel that will meet your expectations, but I have to draw the line at some incredibly ridiculous plot devices. First, Captain Edgemont allows his wife and her companion to sail with him into a wartime situation. We all know that women were considered bad luck on board, but during wartime I expect he might be court-martialed for allowing civilians to travel aboard. Then we find a child aboard another man-of-war. Give me a break!
The second problem I find is the depiction of Edgemont after each battle. It is as though he stands alone and without regard for the mayhem on the lower gun decks. He doesn't go below to see to the wounded or dead, or to the condition of his ship below the waterline. Everything takes place on the quarterdeck and in his cabin. The crew, save for a few officers, are invisible. The third problem is with his colleague Stephen Beven, who acts totally out-of-character, and who makes jokes soon after a death that should devastate him. It's more Hollywood than historical. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-06 06:45:13 EST)
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| 03-01-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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I enjoyed Worrall's first book and I can say that if you are a fan of Forrester and O'Brian then you will definetly like this book.This book has CPT Edgemont serving with Lord Nelson and doing his customary taking names and kicking butt.
So strap on your cutlass and pistols and prepare to board a French man of war. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-23 06:17:28 EST)
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| 03-19-07 | 5 | (NA) |
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Mr. Worrall is, in my mind, equal to Patrick O'Brian and even Julian Stockwin. It is refreshing to read about the good old US of A for a change.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-03-02 06:44:41 EST)
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| 12-29-06 | 3 | 4\5 |
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The start of this book was amazing. The level of details and the authors ability to make you be there in the storm was great reading. Some wonderful comic moments between Bevin and Edgemont and others. The story flowed so well. A wonderful start to the book and I found it hard to put down and take a break. That is until Captain Edgemont found his wife in the middle of the Mediterranean.
It is inconceivable that 2 women traveling together would manage to get into the Mediterranean and eventually end up finding her husband's ship. Then, for the Captain to even allow her on board whilst being in very hostile waters. The book took a huge turn for the worse when we find Penny battering her husband (the captain) to stop firing as he is destroying a French ship. Even when Captain Edgemont comes to her rescue and saves her, she still is not happy about the fighting. The way Edgemont handles his first officer is laughable. Getting his friend Commander Bevin to delay sailing with dispatches so he can help repair Louisa would find all of them hanged. Just when I thought things would get better with the packing off of his wife, we then have some silly action at the end with Edgemont being the one responsible for blowing up the French Flag Ship and killing 1000 sailors. With Edgemont now on his way back to England, you just know the first part of the 3rd book will see more of his wife. I just hope the author leaves her behind early in the book. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-15 08:17:41 EST)
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| 09-10-06 | 3 | 2\4 |
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I found this sequel to be quite disappointing. In fact it turned Charles Edgemont into a henpecked husband who allowed his wife to become "The Captain." I have nothing against strong women, but one who travels such a great distance in time of war just so she can conceive is ludicrous. I read these type of stories for the action at sea and this book let me down.Also I found the introduction of Aubrey and Hornblower (plus his own family name) to be disingenous. And why not Richard Bolitho while he was at it? Maybe he's being saved for another sequel. Stick to the war, Mr. Worrall, and let Penny be strong at home where she can do some good, including the mill and her other improvements. It seemed to me that for an avowed Quaker, she certainly seemed to demonstrate a great deal of pride.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-15 08:17:41 EST)
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| 08-11-06 | 4 | 9\11 |
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If you have discovered Patrick O'Brien, you have probably devoured the twenty or so Aubrey/Maturin volumes followed in prompt succession by the Hornblower novels of Forester. If you have not, then even Mr. Worrall will forgive your putting his book down while you promptly have the literary experience of a lifetime--they are that good. Indeed, young Aubrey makes a cameo in this book. Unfortunately, because the bar has been set so high, the efforts of other authors to create works in this genre often fail to measure up.
Three cheers, then, for Mr. Worrall who has convincingly demonstrated in this second book of his Charles Edgemont series that he has the potential to stand with the best. This second work focuses a bit more upon the characters and a bit less on the action, which though it seems to disturb other reviewers is actually quite necessary. Without engaging and fully-developed characters, the action is merely an historical recital. Too many books of the genre rely entirely upon the author's encyclopedic knowledge of nautical arcana while forgetting that the reader has to be invested in the story. Mr. Worrall succeeds because his characters are moral and good yet complex enough to remain interesting. He is also unafraid to introduce the reader to the great Admiral Nelson to a degree curiously avoided by other authors. Though the surprise appearance of Mrs. Edgemont was somewhat contrived, the marriage of our protagonist makes for a narrative free from the cheesy romance-novel type of story that traps many other works of this genre. I have very, very high hopes for this series and highly recommend both of the volumes completed to date. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-15 08:17:41 EST)
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| 07-19-06 | 3 | 2\6 |
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I looked forward to this sequel to Worrall's first book, but found that he "majored in the minors" and lost me mid-way through. The author placed too much emphasis on Capt. Edgemont's Quaker-pacifist wife, going so far as to have her as a passenger on a combat ship during time of war. The implausibility of that device irked me, and the inevitable conflicts (Quaker wife-Warrior Husband) aboard ship grew tiresome and crowded out the development of a solid story line. I'm still in for a third installment--more story, more action, less husband-wife quibbling, please.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-15 08:17:41 EST)
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| 07-17-06 | 5 | 5\6 |
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My dad had me read the Hornblower series as a kid, and I remember thinking of Forester's stories when I picked up Worrall's first book and then this one. I must say, anyone who enjoyed the Hornblower books should without question give Worrall's a try. Though I enjoyed Sails on the Horizon, Any Approaching Enemy is clearly a better book. As with the characters for any sequel, the characterization of Penny, Charles, and the rest of the returning cast (except perhaps Molly) is better defined, and the reader's familiarity with each makes for a better reading experience. If you're interested enough in this genre to be reading this review, you should go ahead and order both books. You'll thank me later.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-15 08:17:41 EST)
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