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Default Douglass Reeman...

If you've not read any of his historical naval fiction, give yourself a
treat and do so. He also wrote the "Richard Bolitho" series under the name
Alexander Kent. That was a super series. I'm currently reading his 'Royal
Marines Saga', a series of five. Good books.
--
John
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JohnH wrote:
If you've not read any of his historical naval fiction, give yourself a
treat and do so. He also wrote the "Richard Bolitho" series under the name
Alexander Kent. That was a super series. I'm currently reading his 'Royal
Marines Saga', a series of five. Good books.
--
John


For some reason, I just didnt like the Bolitho series although I liked
Reemans WW2 stories. I've read many of the series about fighting
sailing ships but the Bolitho ones just leave me cold. The detail in
the Obrien books was great, I liked the Woodman series about
Drinkwater. My fav is still Hornblower.

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On 29 Dec 2006 13:29:26 -0800, "Frogwatch" wrote:


JohnH wrote:
If you've not read any of his historical naval fiction, give yourself a
treat and do so. He also wrote the "Richard Bolitho" series under the name
Alexander Kent. That was a super series. I'm currently reading his 'Royal
Marines Saga', a series of five. Good books.
--
John


For some reason, I just didnt like the Bolitho series although I liked
Reemans WW2 stories. I've read many of the series about fighting
sailing ships but the Bolitho ones just leave me cold. The detail in
the Obrien books was great, I liked the Woodman series about
Drinkwater. My fav is still Hornblower.


The word 'super' was probably a little overdone. The O'Brian series was
super, the Hornblower next, and the Bolitho came after. Did you read any of
the Alan Lewrie series by Dewey Lambdin? Those were enjoyable.

What was Woodman's first name so I can look him up. Was that also Naval
Fiction?
--
John
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On 29 Dec 2006 13:29:26 -0800, "Frogwatch"
wrote:

My fav is still Hornblower.


Right on with that.

I discovered the Hornblower books when I was in high school and read
them all. They just keep getting better and better as you learn more
about boats, people and history.
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"Harry Krause" wrote in message
. ..
On 12/29/2006 6:06 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On 29 Dec 2006 13:29:26 -0800, "Frogwatch"
wrote:

My fav is still Hornblower.


Right on with that.

I discovered the Hornblower books when I was in high school and read
them all. They just keep getting better and better as you learn more
about boats, people and history.



The Hornblower series is great, but my all-time favorite "seagoing" novel
remains Moby-Dick, followed by the Odyssey.


I am a Michael Crichton and John Grisham fan. My interests in books are not
strictly nautical related.

I never read the Horatio Hornblower collection but it looks like I may have
to give him a look.




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On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 23:30:28 GMT, Tom Francis
wrote:

On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 16:10:43 -0500, JohnH wrote:

If you've not read any of his historical naval fiction, give yourself a
treat and do so. He also wrote the "Richard Bolitho" series under the name
Alexander Kent. That was a super series. I'm currently reading his 'Royal
Marines Saga', a series of five. Good books.


Have you read "Master Mariner" by Nicholas Monsarrat?

Do it if you haven't - it's a great bunch of sea stories.

I won't spoil the plot for you, but it's unique.


Is that this set? A series of four?

FIC MON 1978
The master mariner : running proud
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-



#2 FIC MON 1973
The kappillan of Malta
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-



#3 FIC MON 1968
Richer than all his tribe
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-



#4 FIC MON 1951
The cruel sea
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-


--
John
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Default Douglass Reeman...

On Sat, 30 Dec 2006 01:06:58 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 19:39:31 -0500, JohnH wrote:

On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 23:30:28 GMT, Tom Francis
wrote:

On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 16:10:43 -0500, JohnH wrote:

If you've not read any of his historical naval fiction, give yourself a
treat and do so. He also wrote the "Richard Bolitho" series under the name
Alexander Kent. That was a super series. I'm currently reading his 'Royal
Marines Saga', a series of five. Good books.

Have you read "Master Mariner" by Nicholas Monsarrat?

Do it if you haven't - it's a great bunch of sea stories.

I won't spoil the plot for you, but it's unique.


Is that this set? A series of four?

FIC MON 1978
The master mariner : running proud
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-



#2 FIC MON 1973
The kappillan of Malta
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-



#3 FIC MON 1968
Richer than all his tribe
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-



#4 FIC MON 1951
The cruel sea
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-


No - it's a standalone book. You will enjoy it - historical in nature
which was Monsarrat's forte.


Maybe it's the last of these four. I'll give them a shot as soon as I
finish the Reeman collection. Thanks for the tip.
--
John
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JohnH wrote:
On Sat, 30 Dec 2006 01:06:58 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 19:39:31 -0500, JohnH wrote:

On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 23:30:28 GMT, Tom Francis
wrote:

On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 16:10:43 -0500, JohnH wrote:

If you've not read any of his historical naval fiction, give yourself a
treat and do so. He also wrote the "Richard Bolitho" series under the name
Alexander Kent. That was a super series. I'm currently reading his 'Royal
Marines Saga', a series of five. Good books.

Have you read "Master Mariner" by Nicholas Monsarrat?

Do it if you haven't - it's a great bunch of sea stories.

I won't spoil the plot for you, but it's unique.

Is that this set? A series of four?

FIC MON 1978
The master mariner : running proud
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-



#2 FIC MON 1973
The kappillan of Malta
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-



#3 FIC MON 1968
Richer than all his tribe
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-



#4 FIC MON 1951
The cruel sea
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-


No - it's a standalone book. You will enjoy it - historical in nature
which was Monsarrat's forte.


Maybe it's the last of these four. I'll give them a shot as soon as I
finish the Reeman collection. Thanks for the tip.
--
John


The Drinkwater series is by Richard Woodman. Never read Montserrat,
I'll look him up. The Alan Lewrie series by Lambdin was good although
finding some of them may be difficult as he seemed to have trouble with
his publisher(s).
Another that left me cold was by the guy who wrote the fictional
biography of Hornblower, I forget his name, was it Northcotte?
Cornwell's series about Rifleman Richard Sharpe is very good.
The entire Flashman series (begins in the 1840s in Afghanistan) by G.
M. Fraser was funny and a great way to learn some history while being
entertained.
C.S. Forester who wrote the Hornblower series also wrote "The African
Queen" and "The Good Shepard" about a convoy escort in WW2. He also
wrote an interesting story about one man in the Galapagos who changes
the Naval course of WW1 following the Battle of Coronel but I forget
the name of it.
Now that I think back, I think I did read "The Cruel Sea" by Monsarrat,
was it about a small subhunting vessel in WW2?

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Default Douglass Reeman...

On 30 Dec 2006 16:56:57 -0800, "Frogwatch" wrote:


JohnH wrote:
On Sat, 30 Dec 2006 01:06:58 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 19:39:31 -0500, JohnH wrote:

On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 23:30:28 GMT, Tom Francis
wrote:

On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 16:10:43 -0500, JohnH wrote:

If you've not read any of his historical naval fiction, give yourself a
treat and do so. He also wrote the "Richard Bolitho" series under the name
Alexander Kent. That was a super series. I'm currently reading his 'Royal
Marines Saga', a series of five. Good books.

Have you read "Master Mariner" by Nicholas Monsarrat?

Do it if you haven't - it's a great bunch of sea stories.

I won't spoil the plot for you, but it's unique.

Is that this set? A series of four?

FIC MON 1978
The master mariner : running proud
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-



#2 FIC MON 1973
The kappillan of Malta
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-



#3 FIC MON 1968
Richer than all his tribe
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-



#4 FIC MON 1951
The cruel sea
Monsarrat, Nicholas, 1910-

No - it's a standalone book. You will enjoy it - historical in nature
which was Monsarrat's forte.


Maybe it's the last of these four. I'll give them a shot as soon as I
finish the Reeman collection. Thanks for the tip.
--
John


The Drinkwater series is by Richard Woodman. Never read Montserrat,
I'll look him up. The Alan Lewrie series by Lambdin was good although
finding some of them may be difficult as he seemed to have trouble with
his publisher(s).
Another that left me cold was by the guy who wrote the fictional
biography of Hornblower, I forget his name, was it Northcotte?
Cornwell's series about Rifleman Richard Sharpe is very good.
The entire Flashman series (begins in the 1840s in Afghanistan) by G.
M. Fraser was funny and a great way to learn some history while being
entertained.
C.S. Forester who wrote the Hornblower series also wrote "The African
Queen" and "The Good Shepard" about a convoy escort in WW2. He also
wrote an interesting story about one man in the Galapagos who changes
the Naval course of WW1 following the Battle of Coronel but I forget
the name of it.
Now that I think back, I think I did read "The Cruel Sea" by Monsarrat,
was it about a small subhunting vessel in WW2?


You responded to my post with some questions for Tom. Maybe he'll answer.

I greatly enjoyed the Sharp series. Didn't know about the Drinkwater series
by Woodman, but will look it up.

Luckily, I'm able to put books I want on hold at my local library via the
internet. I've not yet been disappointed with a lack of selection. The only
problem is that I need to read 'em before I fill up the bag again. Again,
luckily, the library allows unlimited renewals, unless someone else has
placed the book on hold. With these older books, that doesn't happen very
often. Right now I've got nine of the Reeman books in my bag.
--
John
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