Home :: Books :: Audiocassettes  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes

Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Commodore Hornblower

Commodore Hornblower

List Price: $48.00
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The saga continues
Review: Commodore Hornblower is an excellent continuation of the adventures of Horatio Hornblower. Fresh from his dramatic victory in Spain and France, Hornblower is dispatched to the Baltic. His mission is to both frustrate Napoleon and support Russia, one of the few nations yet to be conquered by the tyrant.

The result is a tale that fits in perfectly with the Hornblower cannon. Horatio's adventures in the Baltic cover the whole gamut from challenging French privateers to foiling assassination plots to fending off a siege in Riga. And Forester levens the action with a constant reminder of the historical context. 1812 was possibly the most desperate year for England, when it seemed the whole world was against her. (Although, perhaps with his audience in mind, Forester tacitly left out the fact that Britain was at war with America as well. For history buffs, this omission is conspicuous.)

Hornblower is his usual compelling self -- brave, brilliant but with his dark sides. He make decisions and has thoughts that would be considered far too complex and realistic for today's action heroes. I found myself as fascinated by Hornblower himself as I was by the thrilling action scenes.

This is an excellent continuation of the Hornblower series.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Truly Heroic Now
Review: Here we find Hornblower leading adventures of prodigious consequences in the Baltic Sea while in command of a small squadron of ships and bomb ketches. He contemplates the nature of elevated command, tries to restrain himself from interfering in Capt. Bush's ship operation, and deeply worries over diplomacy while running the Kattegat, stalking a privateer, laying a howitzer, meeting royalty, raiding coastal shipping, and attacking Napoleon's flank during Nappy's fateful march on Moscow. In this volume Hornblower is truly, extraordinarily heroic, a hero for all of oppressed Europe. By force of arms and words in a tiny corner of the Baltic he stiffens Russian resolve, frustrates the French, emboldens the Spanish, and perturbs the Prussians. He brushes shoulders with famous Clausewitz and von Bulow. You could have had no idea of the importance of a little river-mouth town in Latvia until C.S. Forester pulls the fateful threads of destiny together in the person of Hornblower! The sense created by Forester here of monstrous forces converging may have something to do with its date of composition, 1945, when another European tyrant's dreams had crumbled. This is so different from the lugubrious version of Baltic action seen in Richard Woodman's book entitled Baltic Mission, in the Drinkwater series. Note there are at least two pb versions from Little Brown still available.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good adventure reading
Review: I am sad to see that I am close to the end of Forester's Horatio Hornblower series. I am greatly enjoying this series of novels.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another fabulous Hornblower adventure!
Review: I liked this novel tremendously. In this one, Hornblower is dispatched to the Baltic in command of a squadron of British vessels, as Britain's struggle with Napoleon nears its climax. Hornblower must deal with all of the usual problems of command, and additionally he must, in fact, also concern himself with high affairs of state. Forester combines these factors brilliantly into a facinating look at Europe during this time period.

I found this novel to be particularly vivid in its portrayal of Hornblower marauding about in the Baltic. You can practically feel the cold Baltic air, see the ice flows, hear the cannon, and see the armies ashore battling one another. Hornblower as usual is in the thick of things. This book in my opinion never drags although the storyline is somewhat more complex than the usual Hornblower novel.

Fans of Hornblower won't want to miss this one. And if you are not a Hornblower afficianado, then what are you waiting for?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another fabulous Hornblower adventure!
Review: I liked this novel tremendously. In this one, Hornblower is dispatched to the Baltic in command of a squadron of British vessels, as Britain's struggle with Napoleon nears its climax. Hornblower must deal with all of the usual problems of command, and additionally he must, in fact, also concern himself with high affairs of state. Forester combines these factors brilliantly into a facinating look at Europe during this time period.

I found this novel to be particularly vivid in its portrayal of Hornblower marauding about in the Baltic. You can practically feel the cold Baltic air, see the ice flows, hear the cannon, and see the armies ashore battling one another. Hornblower as usual is in the thick of things. This book in my opinion never drags although the storyline is somewhat more complex than the usual Hornblower novel.

Fans of Hornblower won't want to miss this one. And if you are not a Hornblower afficianado, then what are you waiting for?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Hi diddle lee dee, the Baltic now for me.
Review: If you have read the series in order you are now treated to the biggest change in the Hornblower character since his first marriage. What do you do with a character that has now achieved all of the primary goals of his life. A secure financial future, the woman he loves and fame and respect. How do you motivate such a character?

Forester pulls it off. Hornblower is put in the position of the many senior officers he has served under. Having to watch rather than giving the orders. Having to decide who risks his life and who does not. Even patronage as Bush is jumped up to a SOL.

The decisions are different and for the most part Hornblower watches others execute his plans. Forester however keeps the tension level high. The handling of a fleet, the delecate matters of diplomacy and a totally different front and nature of the war adds to and completes the character.

The social changes are not ignored as Sir Horatio Hornblower K.B. discovers that the honors and responsibilities of his knighthood are not all they are cracked up to be. Several valuable lessions are given here, all are interesting and entertaining.

Like HORNBLOWER and the ATROPS it is a change of pace, and one worth the money you will spend.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Russian politics and naval strategy
Review: In Commodore, Forester takes our hero to the Baltic Sea to intervene in the war between the Russians and Napoleon. Now on the top half of the Captains list, Hornblower is given command of a small squadron of ships and sent north in as much of a political gambit as a naval one. There are no real naval threats to Hornblower's fleet, a few coastal raiders on British shipping, but the one they find is easily dispatched. Forester spends time detailing the use of bomb vessels, ungainly ships with large mortars in the center. They are used to shell and destroy a ship in a harbor and enemy positions on shore. When Napoleon attacks Russia he sends one army north towards St. Petersburg along the eastern most end of the Baltic, and of course Commodore Hornblower is there to save the day and negotiate a switch of sides by the Prussians. It's a little short on naval lore and a little long on period politics. A contrived dalliance with a Russian lady gives Hornblower flees, and then typhus. At the time it was written it was pretty unusual to have an adulterous affair in a fiction of this kind. It gives more variety to our understanding of British Naval operations in another area of the world.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Russian politics and naval strategy
Review: In Commodore, Forester takes our hero to the Baltic Sea to intervene in the war between the Russians and Napoleon. Now on the top half of the Captains list, Hornblower is given command of a small squadron of ships and sent north in as much of a political gambit as a naval one. There are no real naval threats to Hornblower's fleet, a few coastal raiders on British shipping, but the one they find is easily dispatched. Forester spends time detailing the use of bomb vessels, ungainly ships with large mortars in the center. They are used to shell and destroy a ship in a harbor and enemy positions on shore. When Napoleon attacks Russia he sends one army north towards St. Petersburg along the eastern most end of the Baltic, and of course Commodore Hornblower is there to save the day and negotiate a switch of sides by the Prussians. It's a little short on naval lore and a little long on period politics. A contrived dalliance with a Russian lady gives Hornblower flees, and then typhus. At the time it was written it was pretty unusual to have an adulterous affair in a fiction of this kind. It gives more variety to our understanding of British Naval operations in another area of the world.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Hornblower goes to Russia, with love...
Review: In the eighth volume of the series Commodore Horatio Hornblower, with his own squadron of ships, is bound for the Baltic. It is 1812 and Hornblower must protect the trade and stop the spread of Napoleon's empire into Sweden and Russia. Hostile armies, Russian royalty and ice-bound bays are just SOME of the trouble Hornblower will have to deal with. He even gets to meet Colonel Clausewitz! Will Hornblower ever return to his new wife and son, or will he be trapped in Russia with white skinned ladies of the court, drinking vodka and feasting on meals fit for a King?

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: New Issues and Challenges for Hornblower!
Review: Most Hornblower fans will either be strongly attracted to this story . . . or strongly repelled by it.

In the beginning, this book's mood shifts greatly from the earlier books now that Hornblower is rich and famous, and happily married to Lady Barbara. His glittering brothers-in-law are off winning critical battles, and Hornblower feels like he needs to keep winning some semblance of renown in order to retain Lady Barbara's respect. The book starts off slowly, therefore, in setting the stage for Captain Sir Horatio Hornblower's elevated status in society and in the fleet.

As a commodore, Hornblower has a small squadron under his command, including one ship of the line, the Nonsuch (seventy four guns), commanded by Captain Bush. Hornblower's orders give him the "widest latitude of discretion to enter the Baltic Sea and create problems for Bonaparte, who is threatening both Sweden and Russia in the spring of 1812. Secretly, his brother-in-law, foreign secretary Marquis Wellesley, warns Hornblower that he should be prepared to assist the Czar in leaving St. Petersburg should Napoleon invade and overrun Russia. Within the Baltic, the Russians have 14 ships of the line, and the Swedes almost as many.

Nearing the Baltic, Hornblower knows that the Danes are hostile, having been conquered by the French. So he steers away from their batteries nearing the Baltic. But are the Swedes still neutral? There's only one way to find out. Run under their batteries and see if they fire?

Political events rapidly develop, aided by Hornblower's diplomacy and deceptions. By winter, the Grande Armee has invaded Russia, reached Moscow, and been shattered by the Russian weather. Hornblower, in the meantime, is attempting to thwart an attack through Latvia aimed at capturing the Russian capital of St. Petersburg. The action, once it begins, will remind you somewhat of the best parts of Ship of the Line.

For those who wish to follow the armed conflicts in the book, I suggest you refer to the Hornblower Companion's maps to see where the action is set.

Two other new elements become important in this story. Hornblower is getting older, and begins to develop an interest in his younger officers not unlike a father would have for a son. Yet these "sons" are in deadly peril. How will that affect Hornblower?

The other new perspective is that Hornblower spends a lot of time with diplomats, political figures, and even heads of state. These added dimensions will be attractive to those who would like to see new sides to Hornblower. If you read a lot of historical fiction, you will find this book comes closer to the classic story where the fictional character interacts frequently with well known historical figures.

Since Hornblower and Bush are both captains, you find their relationship becoming more like equals as it was in Lieutenant Hornblower. I enjoyed that shift.

Much like Hornblower and the Atropos, Commodore Hornblower takes some interesting looks at new technology, including naval mortars and methods for reducing the draft of bomb-ketches.

How can a leader set a good example? How should setting the right example be balanced with the need to get the right results? In Commodore Hornblower, Hornblower is torn between leading all of the action and encouraging his men to do the right thing. It's obviously a delicate balance that you will enjoy as Hornblower once again foils the Corsican tyrant in his own small way.




<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates