Member Reviews
Excellent historical fiction, well written and researched.
I found it gripping and entertaining, loved the fast paced plot and the great characters.
The historical background is vivid and fascinating.
Highly recommmended.
Many thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for this ARC, all opinions are mine
Major William Hazzard of the Marines has been tasked by the Admiralty with countering the French under Bonaparte in the Mediterranean. He is captive of the French and discovers his beloved Sarah has been spying undercover in the French high command; all his and her attempts to reunite and escape together are thwarted. The French spy Derrien is their espionage opponent on the French side.. Hazzard escapes to Egypt and is present as Napoleon invades. Swashbuckling adventure at the highest.
Lords of the Nile by Jonathan Spencer
William John Hazzard #2
Riveting read from beginning to end! I could not put this book down as I was drawn in more and more with each page I read. One might consider being in the Navy romantic but the men who fought in real battles often ended up maimed or dead. The life was not easy, and these stories bring that life alive. In this second book of the series not much time is spent on ships. Instead, we pick up at the end of book one when Hazzard and Sarah see one another again after a few years apart. What transpires next is heartfelt, intense, gritty, and filled with action. It was a terrific story!
What I liked:
* John Hazzard: intelligent, courageous, tenacious, strong in body and mind, a good leader, has a strong moral compass, a warrior, and a good man. I like him, feel sorry for him, and hope that he will survive the series with something at the end to look forward to when he retires.
* The men that follow Hazzard: dedicated to him and to the life of being a sailor/warrior – great teammates.
* The close alignment with history – and that it made me more knowledgeable than I was before I read the book.
* That I felt I was there in the midst of the story
* That I cared about the outcome
* Revisiting places I have been before and seeing them in a differently due to time and events in the story.
* The intensity, plot, pacing, character development, and writing
* Thinking about how much Hazzard and Sarah must have grown and changed over the time they were apart.
* That the author did not shy away from the dark and gritty brutal aspects of war
* Thinking about the mentality required to go to war and/or to be a spy
* All of it really except…
What I didn’t like:
* Derrien and his thugs/followers: evil men doing evil things because they were “called” to do so for their nation – or more likely – because they enjoyed inflicting pain and the power they derived from their positions
* The loss of life due to war – good people die – and so often the reasons for war do not benefit the common man…or even the men doing the fighting
Did I like this book? Yes
Would I read more in this series? Definitely
Thank you to NetGalley and Canelo for the ARC – This is my honest review.
5 Stars
Dynamite read!
William Hazzard continues his quest to search for Admiral Nelson and Napoleon's fleet, for Sarah-Louise Chapel--the woman he's always loved, and the mysterious missing Admiralty agent. All becomes enmeshed in Napoleon Bonaparte's plans for Egypt and the restoration of the Suez Canal. Bonaparte is searching for an entrée into the theatre of India. Only it seems no-one in power in England, the diplomatic channels or the relevant nations around the Mediterranean, including Malta, understand or comprehends Napoleon's long game. Their lack of credence becomes their downfall.
This next part of the Hazzard saga begins in June 1978 and sweeps from Malta to Egypt with Citizen Jules-Yves Derrien, known as Citizen Croquemort –the Mortician, Bonaparte's spymaster, still dogging his steps. Or is Hazzard dogging Derriens? Derrien is totally obsessed by his role and as he sees it, importance to the French Republic. He sees all as accountable to him as an officer of the Republic, even Bonaparte. He's a depraved heartless slave to his role in a repressed sexual way. When he meets any person he can transfer that obsession to its definitely unpleasant. Both Hazzard and Sarah become objects of that focus.
Hazzard has moments of being more a Lawrence of Arabia type figure as Spencer deftly weaves his role with his fellow arms men, the Unknowns Extraordinary and those who would listen to him…but then I guess that's what Hazzard does--even as he loathes the role and the contemptuous behaviour of the Admiralty. His orders were ‘to engage the enemy independently by any means possible.’ That is where Hazzard's intuitive brilliance comes to the fore.
Sarah continues to need Hazzard's help and is a primary part of the action that swallows him up with necessity and rage. He displays an ever resourceful creative mind, supported by a band of men who cleave to him out of an earned loyalty, an understanding that he cares for them and would never ask of them anything he wouldn't do himself, and dare I say it, a brotherhood of love forged in battle.
Once again I was swept away with the action and couldn't stop to sleep until I'd finished, transfixed as I was by Hazzard’s exploits and Spencer's superb writing--a blend of fact and fiction that slayed me with its raw power.
A Canelo ARC via NetGalley
(Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.)