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Master and Commander by Patrick O'Brian
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Master and Commander

by Patrick O'Brian

Series: Aubrey-Maturin (1)

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3,71363662 (4.07)119
Recently added bycuriat, private library, rybie2, AaronJBarlow, Nodami, lotw, mikehappysmith, ctheiss63
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English (60)  Norwegian (1)  Dutch (1)  French (1)  All languages (63)
Showing 1-5 of 60 (next | show all)
I absolutely lost myself in Patrick O'Brien's Aubrey-Maturin series. Somehow I had never heard of this series until the Master and Commander movie, which I enjoyed so much I bought the DVD. The making-of portion of the DVD discussed the entire series of books, so I began reading and did not stop until the last, partially completed "21." I have now read the series through twice. In a way I am glad that I did not become aware of the series until after Patrick O'Brien's death because I was able to "chain read" the series. I am in awe of the author's writing, his meticulous research, and his ability to create such memorable characters and spin an incredibly good yarn. ( )
  deckled | Nov 1, 2009 |
Worth the effort: From reading the previous reviews it is apparent that this novel polarises opinions like few others, i.e. you'll either love it or hate it. People who hate it find the language archaic, "eighteenth century nautical terms scattered like confetti", the characters wooden and hard to sympathise with, and struggle to engage with the novelist. Many readers, perhaps enticed by the Russell Crowe film, will find themselves buying this book and then struggling to get beyond the first chapter. It is not easy reading, not like Sharpe, or Hornblower that you can race through, especially at the outset. However, if you like a book with a bit of substance behind it, are prepared to do a little bit of work to understand what is going on, and will give the characters room to breathe, you may just find yourself rewarded beyond expectations as a treasurehouse opens up before you.

This is the first of a series of twenty novels and you really do need to read them in sequence, (1. Master and Commander, 2. Post Captain, 3. HMS Surprise etc.),as the author tends to tell you something once and then expects you to remember it. If you start with The Far Side of the World, number ten, because of the film, you will be hopelessly adrift; nothing the characters do or say will make any sense, and the plot is very different from the film so you will not recognise what you are reading.

Start with this one then, book one and don't just skim it for the adventure story. Climb the rigging with the lubberly Dr Stephen Maturin and listen as he has explained to him the masts, yards and sails of the Sophie. After only a few pages you know the difference between the foremast and the mizzen, the stays, tops and ratlines. You will benefit from getting some maps; Minorca and the Spanish coast east of Gibraltar (look them up as soon as the place names come out of the text). You want to get a feel for the shape of the coast, harbours and ports. Don't spend any money, just five minutes with the Google map facility and print them off, nicely magnified so you get all the capes and points. Now you can feel the tension as the Sophie ducks under the enemy guns, steals a prize and races for safety with a half dozen frigates in hot pursuit; all the naval engagements make a whole lot more sense; you might even mark the positions of the vessels and follow their movements; Patrick O'Brian gives you enough description to clearly visualise every detail and this is where he scores most of his points and wins his lifelong devotees. The author had vast resources of knowledge about naval engagements of the period and most of the action is painstakingly recreated from real events, as reported by those who took part in them. This is far more than historical fiction, it is the bringing back to vivid life of a period of our relatively recent history.

Next if you find the story intriguing but the nautical terms frustrating (you are not alone in this), you might consider purchasing a reference book: The World of Jack Aubrey by David Miller (I paid £5.99), a shortish, hard-backed book for the twenty-first century reader, full of diagrams and explanations and with a glossary of technical terms. The mysteries of the stunsail, the use of the log, the bells of the watch and the use of the glass will all become clear, along with good descriptions of the various vessels that feature, from lateens to bum-boats, sloops and brigs, the points of the compass and the different fighting styles of the British and French men o' war (British preferred solid shot aimed at the hull that sent explosions of splinters through the enemy crew, wheras the French preferred chain and grape shot to disable and capture.

A further book is a worthwhile purchase, Admiral W.H. Smyth's The Sailor's Word-Book (Conway £9.99). This fat period tome comprises over 14,000 nautical and naval terms, every technical word used by Patrick O'Brian is in there, described in crisp clarity, the Admiral spent the seven years of his retirement from 1858 - 1865 working on this mine of information and the Aubrey/Maturin enthusiast will have this reference close by at all times.

To bring the experience fully to life I would also recommend a day out to the Portsmouth historic harbour; a couple of hours inhaling the air aboard the H.M.S. Victory touching the cables and absorbing the perspectives will be well spent.

If you find yourself shouting, "Vast that anchor", to your wife in the Sainsbury's car park, and your kids buy you a parrot for Christmas then it's possible that you might be allowing your enthusiasm to carry you a little too far, but until then, enjoy the journey.

1 vote iayork | Aug 9, 2009 |
A few months ago, I watched a documentary of O'Brian that was done in the late 90s before his death. He was cagey about his life, but I was amused because all the personal info was complete lies. After re-reading Master and Commander, I have a theory about that. O'Brian was a man from that time. He was from 1800. Oh yes, the structures of the books are quite modern, but he writes with the knowledge of the native. He knew this world. He was a time traveler. That's the only logical explanation. ( )
  rameau | Aug 9, 2009 |
Excellent book, excellent series. O'Brian's writing intertwines adventure, action, maritime drama, sailing ships, science, espionage and politics, not to mention romance.
  Noslienad | Aug 8, 2009 |
My father summed up this guy in a word, "Ponderous." ( )
  mattearls | Jul 12, 2009 |
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The music-room in the Governor's House at Port Mahon, a tall, handsome, pillared octagon, was filled with the triumphant first movement of Locatelli's C major quartet.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Wikipedia in English (4)

Aubrey–Maturin series

HMS Agamemnon (1781)

Master and Commander

Post Captain (novel)

Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Audiobook Review (ISBN 0393325172, Paperback)

Since Patrick O'Brian launched his series of historical novels with Master and Commander in 1970, millions of readers have enjoyed the adventures of Captain Jack Aubrey and his friend, surgeon Stephen Maturin. O'Brian's prose, so immediate and yet so distinctly capturing the language and culture of the English navy in the first moments of the 19th century, rolls effortlessly off the tongue of actor Robert Hardy. Never for a second do we doubt that this is the way an English naval officer would have expressed himself in 1800, and that these are the sights, sounds, and emotions he encountered. As Aubrey sails his ship into battle, we don't need the sounds of cannon to share this moment with him; Hardy's voice is the ideal instrument. (Running time: 4.5 hours, three cassettes) --Lou Schuler

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:09 -0400)

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