The Blackbirder: A captivating and thrilling adventure set on the high seas
By (Author) James Nelson
Transworld Publishers Ltd
Corgi Books
1st March 2002
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Fiction
Sea stories
War, combat and military adventure fiction
Historical fiction
Narrative theme: Politics
Maritime history
Naval forces and warfare
813.6
Paperback
448
Width 106mm, Height 178mm, Spine 27mm
228g
Reformed pirate Thomas Marlowe is now married to the beautiful Elizabeth and owner of a tobacco plantation just outside Williamsburg. Thomas has taken the radical step of freeing his slaves and paying them to work on his land, which has made him hugely unpopular with his neighbours. King James, the huge ex-slave and captain of Marlowe's sloop, goes to the rescue of a ship in distress, only to find that it is a slave ship - a blackbirder. There is a fight and James kills the Captain. Realising that he cannot go back to Williamsburg, he decides to take over the slave ship and return the slaves to Africa. Unfortunately for James, amongst the slaves there is an evil black slave trader, Madshaka, who is determined that none of the slaves will be set free. The second part of the enthralling Brethren of the Coast trilogy.
'A master of both his period and of the English language' -- Patrick O'Brian
'A swashbuckling yarn...If Errol Flynn was still alive, there'd be a movie here' * Bournemouth Daily Echo *
James Nelson has served as a seaman, rigger, boatswain and officer on a number of sailing vessels. He is the author of the five books comprising his The Revolution at Sea saga and The Brethren of the Coast trilogy. He lives with his wife and children in Maine. His web site can be found at www.jameslnelson.com.