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The Inshore Squadron (The Bolitho Novels) | 
enlarge | Author: Alexander Kent Publisher: McBooks Press Category: Book
List Price: $15.95 Buy New: $6.95 You Save: $9.00 (56%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 12 reviews Sales Rank: 172275
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 288 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.5 x 0.8
ISBN: 0935526684 Dewey Decimal Number: 823.914 EAN: 9780935526684 ASIN: 0935526684
Publication Date: October 1, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Copenhagen, 1800. After seven years of cruel war against France, Britain's long-standing ally, Denmark, suddenly poses a threat. The scene of battle shifts to the Baltic where the British navy encounters the bitter hardship of blockade duty.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 7 more reviews...
Leave the Romance to others April 12, 2007 Alexander Kents Richard Bolitho series has always been strongest in its depiction of naval battles during the age of sail and weakest when it comes to matter of the heart between the two sexes. Therefore, you can imagine my disappointment to find that The Inshore Squadron is focused squarely on Richard Bolithos love and family life.
In this volume, Bolitho has already been promoted to Rear-Admiral. This seems to be astonishingly fast as we only had one story of him as a Commodore while we had many of him as a Captain. But lets leave that aside. As usual, Bolitho manages to have a squadron of his compatriots around him and all the usual characters are either on his ship or elsewhere in the fleet. Herrick is newly married and commanding the flagship while Inch is now a full Captain in charge of a 64 gun ship (Inch moved from a bomb Ketch as a Commander to a flag Captain awfully fast too!). Allday is the Admirals Coxswain and Adam Pascoe is on board as the third Lieutenant. Also present from the past is Captain Charles Keverne who previously appeared in the series as a midshipman. Is it simply my imagination or has the world of the British Navy gotten awfully chummy? Well, that was a rhetorical question as every Admiral and senior office that we meet is always for the first time, while the gang that comes up in the Bolitho stories are maturing and being promoted along with him. Maybe it was simply that a lot of new ships are being commissioned at this time?
Anyway, Bolithos squadrons first mission is to relieve one of the squadrons that is blockading the Baltic. As part of this mission, Bolitho takes a Frigate to Copenhagen to present his credentials and thereby enters the world of diplomacy for the first time. As it happens, a French Frigate is also at Copenhagen. Bolitho is introduced to the crown prince of Denmark in a surreptitious manner which makes me think that there will be more to this in future volumes. While sleeping in Copenhagen, Bolitho is alerted that six British merchant ships have been captured and are in the Baltic. At the same time, the French Frigate leaves the harbor. Bolitho ignores the rules of neutrality and rushes to find the French ship and the captured British ones and immediately attacks the larger ship and releases the merchantmen.
Back on station a French squadron appears. It is escorting a transport ship bringing crack French soldiers to help train the Russian army (One of many incongruities here is why the French insist on transporting many of their mail or important things via ships when the overland routes are safer, more direct, and more convenient V but I suppose then there would be no stories to tell?). Bolithos smaller squadron attacks and manages to turn the French squadron around. Unfortunately, Bolitho is wounded by a musket ball in the thigh during the engagement. All of this happens in the first few chapters.
Now, comes the best part of this book as we learn what it is like to be subject to the medical care of that time and how easy it is for people to die while under it. Compared to the care available today, this part of the book makes one shiver and quail as the rough medical care is provided as the best there is. No fear though V Bolitho survives! Of course, it is apparent that the surgeon would have amputated the leg of anyone else, but because this was the admiral, wellK
As Bolitho is healing we switch over to the romantic part of the story. This is where Kents weaknesses come to light. First he creates an unbelievable recreation of the scene in which Bolitho loses his wife Cheney. Then, to compound the problem, the damsel being rescued is a carbon copy of Cheney in looks and is even loosely related to her. Finally, and not surprisingly, Belinda is unbearably beautiful and recently widowed. Now, isnt that convenient? As usual in these stories, Belinda and Bolitho spend one or two hours together and are in immediate and passionate love with each other. Oh, Kent throws a couple of curveballs at us and has them separate here and there with no assurance of the love being returned or consummated but those are clearly ruses. These parts of the story occupy most of the book.
To help in making it seem like a real Bolitho story, we are also entertained with another two rounds of Bolitho needing to guard his nephews reputation from his brother Hughs misdeeds. This time it goes as far as a duel with a proxy for a senior office involved. And, we are given to understand that Bolitho and his squadron also took part in the Battle of Copenhagen in a role that is auxiliary to Nelsons. This is the second straight book in which Bolitho plays on the same stage as Nelson as we head toward Trafalgar.
As you can tell from my writing, I think that Kent writes and excellent adventure series as long as he maintains his focus on sailing ships, handling them, and the action between the British and French navies. He clearly loses his touch when he attempts to add romantic elements to the story. I wish he would stop trying to add the romantic elements and focus on his best side V the adventure aspects.
The Inshore Squadron January 19, 2007 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Calling all Richard Bolitho fans. Be sure to continue the series with The Inshore Squadron. Written with the flare and excitement as all of the previous books in the series. Alexander Kent is untiring in his ability to keep your interest up throughout the story.
The continuing adventures of Richard Bolitho February 11, 2004 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
Bolitho is promoted to Rear Admiral and given command of a squadron assigned to the Baltic, where the Tsar of Russia is trying to create an alliance with the scandinavians, and simultaneously make an alliance with Napoleon. Bolitho meets a relative of his late wife, who bears a close resembland to her, and loses his heart to her.
This is another great Kent novel, set in 1800 from the viewpoint of the British Navy. This is the 13th book out of 26 in the Bolitho series, and they are all exciting depictions of life aboard ships of His Brittanic Majesty's fleet. Like the rest of them, one gets the feeling that the period is accurately depicted, with sufficient detail and character development to make you feel that you are a witness to history. I must admit that I am a fan of Alexander Kent (a pseudonym) and his naval fiction. He seems very knowledgeable about square riggers, their armament, and the problems inherent in naval warfare with only the wind to provide propulsion. Do I recommend these books? Absolutely! Joseph (Joe) Pierre, USN (Ret)
author of Handguns and Freedom...their care and maintenance and other books
Deja vu February 7, 2002 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Ever humble in his sterling achievements, a popular hero cheered by his men, Richard Bolitho has been made rear-admiral. Bolitho has moved away from his more happy-go-lucky (but never sky-larking!) enthusiam of youth and turned towards introspection and the burdens of ever broader commands of, necessarily, ever more anonymous people (now grown to 3000). Kent seems increasingly interested in writing of the psychology and pressures of supreme command. We see the thinking of The Admiralty vying with the jealousies of admirals, or the uncertainties of information and of diplomatic choices. In the climactic battle for Copenhagen we see Bolitho make his first cold-blooded command decision to throw away a ship in favor of the survival of his fleet as a whole. This is an often grim story that jumps between English ports and the entry to the Baltic Sea, plots and battles, health and death, and points of view. As with the novels of Hornblower and Drinkwater, Bolitho's Baltic mission is intimately tied to Tsar Paul's potential (mes-)alliance with Napoleon in 1801, and the British attempts to prevent it. Britain was fighting the greatest threat to its existence in 800 years, struggling to keep any allies at all on the continent to face the totalitarian French juggernaut (Hitler's model). The secondary story is about Adam Pascoe, Bolitho's orphaned nephew, and his growth as an officer in the squadron through trying personal relationships and, finally, knowledge of his birth. Extraordinary coincidences threaten to repeat some of the dark episodes of earlier stories: a wound that again drives Bolitho out of his mind, Pascoe's involvement in another duel like his traitorous father's, a carriage wreck like that which killed his beloved wife, and someone providentially like her.... As a writer Kent doesn't include informative period asides so much as go for the jugular of battle or command tensions. In idle moments Bolitho indulges in reminiscence of people from earlier stories, of most meaning if you've already read them. As always, pay really close atttention to any sailing instructions (e.g., difference between wind veering and backing) if you want to visualize what's going on; at one critical point I thought two squadrons were approaching battle bow-on, when they weren't! I really missed a map of the intricate waterways at the mouth of the Baltic.
Admiral he's not! December 10, 2001 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
In Number 13, Bolitho becomes a rear admiral; Herrick is his flag captain, Pascoe is on board. Bolitho was an average midshipman, a good lieutenant and and excellent captain, although most of his more daring feats were ashore. Kent can't let go of this, and Bolitho improbably hangs his flag on a small frigate, to get that frigate action that Aubrey could never let go of. The best thing about this book in the series is the almost soap-opera relationship with Allday, Pascoe and Herrick. Bolitho finds a new woman, a carbon copy of Cheney, in a most unbelievable way. We still do not get enough of either the wardroom or the lower decks, except from Dick's ever more removed view. I do not like Admiral Bolitho much, not as much as I liked him before he became an admiral; but he is still more likable than the irascible Nathaniel Drinkwater (Woodman). We lack the incompetent, malevolent superior, as Bolitho becomes the superior. A good enough read, however, to lead me into #14.
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