
1793: Europe is at war; to man the British warships, ordinary citizens must be press-ganged. When Thomas Paine Kydd, a young wig-maker from Guildford, is seized to become part of the crew of the 98-gun ship Duke William, he must learn the harsh realities of shipboard life fast amid the dangers of tempest and battle.
With the mastery of a virtuoso, Stockwin delivers a seamless tale that ensnares the reader in whatever Kydd sees, hears, feels, and experiences, be it a ferocious flogging, the depths of despair, men fomenting mutiny, or the brutality of war. . . Kydd is a deftly woven and riveting sea story that refuses to let go once the grappling hooks are thrown. When the last page is turned, readers will yearn for the next book in the Kydd Sea Adventures.
Stockwin's debut focuses on the common seamen . . . Kydd's first storm at sea is rendered with great drama . . . warfare is depicted with gruesome, at times breath-stopping, detail.
A rousing debut . . . a brilliantly imagined account of a man overcoming fear.
Adventure and historical fans will delight in this well-crafted yarn.
A rousingly exciting and delicious full-immersion in the perils of seafaring and society during the great Age of Sail!
[Stockwin] writes evocatively of shipboard routine, the panic and confusion of combat, and the terrifying approach of a storm at sea, and he knows how to stage enthralling action scenes.
Comparable to C.C. Humphreys's Jack Absolute series and the naval tales of the great Patrick O'Brian.
A rip-roaring yarn that confirms . . . [Stockwin's] ability to turn his vivid knowledge of eighteenth-century seafaring into first-rate global adventure.
Stockwin's writing is enriched by his own experiences in the Royal Navy, which gives scenes of fighting and tempest an authenticity to delight anyone who shares his passion for the sea.
Elegantly plotted . . . the writing has the power of a broadside at close range.
Stockwin's descriptions of the bloody reality of naval combat 200 years ago are memorably vivid, and reveal a profound respect for the seamen who were willing to sacrifice their lives to help save their country.