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The Commodore Audio Book
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The Commodore
Author:
Patrick O'Brian
Reader: Simon Vance
Captain Jack Aubrey and Stephen Maturin return to England and Aubrey's promotion to Commodore. In addition to dealing with domestic issues, they once again find themselves at sea in the thick of adventure: fighting the Napoleonic Wars and tracking down slave traders. 17th in the series. "Complex, intriguing... rich historical detail."Booklist
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Available Audio Book Editions:
| A8B435 |
UNABRIDGED |
Audio CDs ( 8 ) |
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Publish Date: 10/01/2007
ISBN: 9781433204357
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| A7B434 |
Unabridged |
Cassettes (7) |
$29.95 |
More Info > |
| A1B113 |
Unabridged |
MP3-CD (1) |
$29.95 |
More Info > |
| AP6348 |
Unabridged |
Playaway (1) |
$59.99 |
More Info > |
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Synopsis:
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On a strange decoy mission to the disease-ridden lagoons of the Gulf of New Guinea, Captain Aubrey and secret intelligence agent Maturin are ordered to suppress the slave trade, but the French are mounting an invasion that will give the men added problems. Read by Simon Vance. Book available.
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Book Reviews:
| "One fears that 'The Commodore', the 17th novel by Patrick O'Brian in the Aubrey-Maturin series, will not quite come up to the standard. Fear not." |
| New York Times Book Review - Joel White (04/30/1995) |
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Author Bio:
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Born in England as Richard Patrick Russ, the eighth of nine children, O'Brian changed his name and cut himself off from his family at the age of 29, for reasons unknown. He published a book at the age of 15, called CAESAR: THE LIFE STORY OF A PANDA LEOPARD. A doctor recommended sea air for his weak lungs, and he learned to sail--a lifelong interest that is a vital part of his Aubrey-Maturin novels, his popular and critically acclaimed novels of the English navy during the Napoleonic Wars. O'Brian married young, had a son and a daughter (who died in childhood), and was divorced before World War II. In 1945, he married Mary Wicksteed Tolstoy (who when he met her was married to Count Dmitri Tolstoy). O'Brian was unfit for active duty in World War II; instead, he drove an ambulance and worked for the British secret service. After the war, he and Mary moved to Wales under his new name, and he began to write, but eventually they relocated to the more congenial climate of the small village of Collioure, in the south of France, where O'Brian lived in determined obscurity. The first of the Aubrey-Maturin novels, MASTER AND COMMANDER, was published in 1969; the last, BLUE AT THE MIZZEN, appeared in 1999. He claimed that his chief influence was not Conrad or Melville or any other master of the sea novel, but Jane Austen, whom he revered above all other writers and re-read constantly. In addition to the Aubrey-Maturin series, O'Brian wrote biographies (of Picasso, among others) and translated many works from French. Like his character Stephen Maturin, he was a dedicated naturalist. He was also an amateur astronomer, knew several languages well (including Spanish and Catalan), and had a small vineyard behind his house. He died in Dublin, where he worked for the last two years of his life as an honored guest of Trinity College.
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