Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Superb tale of a region Review: As a devout reader of Michener, Rutherford and Jakes, William Martin's Cape Cod is just as good as anything written by those authors. I judge historical novels on how well they capture the 'sense of place' of the region they focus on. I have spent summers in Cape Cod when I was very young and am currently delving into the genealogy of New England families, and for me, Cape Cod really captured the historical and present-day feelings of the land and the people extremely well.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: CAPE COD.....It ain't just beaches..... Review: At least not in William Martin's novel of the same name. In Martin's CAPE COD there are feuding families, long-held secrets, regional history and, tying it all together, a mystery - as well as those wondrous beaches and that natural essence of 'The Cape' (as we New Englanders know and love it) that he brings to life in this story. From the first pages of this novel, in which whales inexplicably beach themselves, Native Americans and White men clash, and the Pilgrims, noble, flawed and human as they were, suffer the awful indignities of the relentless voyage to the New World, we're off on a William Martin-style adventure. As is his BACK BAY and ANNAPOLIS, the story unfolds through the eyes of (sometimes warring - always interesting) families, and jumps back and forth in time. This enables us to feel the historical events that are going to impact on the modern-day intrigue. I have always liked this about William Martin's stories. This sense of what it was like 'then,' how people felt, how they acted. We get to enjoy a well written tale and learn a thing or three along the way. Martin's respect for, and love of, history is evident throughout CAPE COD, as it is in ANNAPOLIS, BACK BAY and CITIZEN WASHINGTON. And his reverence for 'The Cape' will be evident to every reader, especially we Cape lovers! For us, that's a bonus. To read CAPE COD is to feel, in those pages, that essence of 'TheCape,'that infuses us as soon as we have crossed the Sagamore and the Bourne bridges....CAPE COD is a wonderful story, a lesson in our history, and the kind of enlightening adventure we have come to expect from William Martin. As usual, he delivers! Read this book...Perhaps sitting in a lounge chair on a sunny summer day at the edge of Old Silver Beach...You'll be glad you did....
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: CAPE COD.....It ain't just beaches..... Review: At least not in William Martin's novel of the same name. In Martin's CAPE COD there are feuding families, long-held secrets, regional history and, tying it all together, a mystery - as well as those wondrous beaches and that natural essence of 'The Cape' (as we New Englanders know and love it) that he brings to life in this story. From the first pages of this novel, in which whales inexplicably beach themselves, Native Americans and White men clash, and the Pilgrims, noble, flawed and human as they were, suffer the awful indignities of the relentless voyage to the New World, we're off on a William Martin-style adventure. As is his BACK BAY and ANNAPOLIS, the story unfolds through the eyes of (sometimes warring - always interesting) families, and jumps back and forth in time. This enables us to feel the historical events that are going to impact on the modern-day intrigue. I have always liked this about William Martin's stories. This sense of what it was like 'then,' how people felt, how they acted. We get to enjoy a well written tale and learn a thing or three along the way. Martin's respect for, and love of, history is evident throughout CAPE COD, as it is in ANNAPOLIS, BACK BAY and CITIZEN WASHINGTON. And his reverence for 'The Cape' will be evident to every reader, especially we Cape lovers! For us, that's a bonus. To read CAPE COD is to feel, in those pages, that essence of 'TheCape,'that infuses us as soon as we have crossed the Sagamore and the Bourne bridges....CAPE COD is a wonderful story, a lesson in our history, and the kind of enlightening adventure we have come to expect from William Martin. As usual, he delivers! Read this book...Perhaps sitting in a lounge chair on a sunny summer day at the edge of Old Silver Beach...You'll be glad you did....
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: you can't put this book down! Review: Cape Cod is the kind of book you can't put down. Makes you question many of the characters actions; making you, the reader involved in the Bigelow/ Hilyard fued. A wonderful book to learn from about being human and human actions.
Rating: ![3 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-3-0.gif) Summary: Arise Readers... Review: Cape Cod, Engrossing..Entertaining..The perfect book to take to the beach-so says the Boston Sunday Hearld. A mixture of truth..and misleading fallacy.. Entertaining? Slightly..Engrossing? hardly. I had to force feed parts of it to my brain..other parts I simply skimmed, How much DESCRIPTION is a person expected to sustain? Annapolis was the first book I read by William Martin, I instantly feel in love, and mistakenly thought the seeming lack of depth to the "story" near the end of the book was a conscious effort to bring the reader down easily. In the reading of Cape Cod..I find the same shallow feel to the 20th century aspects of the book. Cape Cod is a yoyo, sucking you down into the past, wrapping you in the arms of another time,engulfing you in the beauty of a well told tale, then jerking you up, ripping away the comfort of oblivion and rudely inserting you into the black embrace of..here and "now". I enjoy Martins' tales of the past, I do not enjoy his depiction, or characters of the 20th century, he lacks..something in that area, and leaves me wondering if the same man mints both sides of the coin. One interesting thing about this book, which amused me greatly and had me applauding, is that there is not one single character amoung the many, that is even partially likable, which satisfys my misanthropic view of the world. Martin should stick to weaving words which draw A picture of the world behind us..and leave others to dwell in the present.. I think I'll try Nerve Endings next.. Who wants to send it to me? As it seems to be out of print.. *sigh*
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: A Superlative Read Review: I am a history buff here at Harvard and search for novels that capture the power and essence of the time they cover. I have found such a novel in Cape Cod by William Martin, a riveting, very well researched tale of power, romance and intrigue. I could not put it down, a comment I rarely use.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: you can't put this book down! Review: I read "Annapolis" and became a fan of William Martins'. Now... I've read what has to be his best! This book you will not want to put down. I read it at work and at home....Next..."Citizen Washington" (George is one of my favorites) Well...off to the shopping cart I go!!!!!
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Super Readability--Five Stars!!! Review: I read "Annapolis" and became a fan of William Martins'. Now... I've read what has to be his best! This book you will not want to put down. I read it at work and at home....Next..."Citizen Washington" (George is one of my favorites) Well...off to the shopping cart I go!!!!!
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: America's beginnings Review: Martin brings the plight of the Pilgrims to life. He also manages also to so us once again that these were people and not icons. While fiction, it is easy to visualize the petty argumnets and personality struggles within this group that most of us assume was a cohesive unit with a united purpose. Using his now familiar device of switching back and forth from now and then, Martin paints a living picture of the early history of the Cape. This was the last of Martin's books that I read prior to Citizen Washington. I hesitated because I thought the topic limited but I ended learning and enjoying a compelling history of a special niche in American history.Martin demonstrates an uncanny ability to tell the great stories (Annapolis - US Navy) a the small (Cape Cod) and make them breathe.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: A must for history buffs; made me drive to Plymouth! Review: Martin uses an excellent style to craft an intricate historical fiction novel. Books like this make history exciting and memorable. I have read several of his books and will read the rest.
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