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The French Admiral (The Naval Adventures of Alan Lewrie, No. 2)

The French Admiral (The Naval Adventures of Alan Lewrie, No. 2)

List Price: $17.95
Your Price: $12.21
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I loved the first book, why is the second out of print?
Review: "The French Admiral" is the second book of a multibook series. I found the others to be very exciting but for the life of me, I can not understand why a book (part of a series published in 1992) has now been taken out of print. It seems to have recieved extremely good reviews. It's a good tale which kept me interesting in the future of its young hero. My only criticisms of Mr. Lambdin's wooks is that he has a tendency to slip out of the vernacular of the period and into modern speech. Also the extensive sexual vinettes become altogether too pornographic (not that I don't like good porn now and then) but for this work I think it detracts.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Gritty! The Revolutionary War from the British perspective.
Review: As a strong fan of Dewey Lamdins' books, I've now read them all, The French Admiral was the best. I felt a much greater sense of history and a deeper understanding of the conflict as it impacted the lives of Loyalists, Revolutionaries, and their families. The bloody fighting seemed more in context than the conflicts described in the other books of this series.

I recommend this book very highly.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Lewrie in the Field not the Saddle
Review: Dewey Lambdin is unique in the Napoleonic naval genre; an American writing about the Royal Navy at its high water mark. Considering that The French Admiral was set during the American Revolution, Lambdin must have felt some interesting conflicts in writing the story. Lambdin's protagonist Alan Lewrie sees the American Revolution through the darkest moments (from the British perspective) in 1781. In The French Admiral Lambdin does a great job of not gilding the lily either way.

In The King's Coat Lambdin introduced young Alan Lewrie as a classic wastrel and the reader follows his progression to a competent midshipman. The book is an eclectic mix of ribald adventures and gory battle scenes. The French Admiral follows in the same vein with the same sense of anarchy until the Battle of Chesapeake Bay when the story becomes darker. Lewrie et al end up at Yorktown before Washington begins his assault. At Yorktown we get the sense of a bloody guerilla war that is filled with atrocities from both sides and the sense of hopelessness of the British cause.

In Lambdin's notes he mentions that the atrocities committed by Banastre Tarleton were well known and documented and he has assumed that atrocities committed by revolutionaries were prevalent. Actually he didn't need to assume that as such atrocities were documented and led to Loyalists immigrating to Canada. Combine examples of man's inhumanity to man with the futility of a lost cause and the darkness of The French Admiral is understandable. There is also a Kafkaesque element to it, as Admiral DeGrasse of the title never enters the action.

The fall of Yorktown should surely strike parallels for contemporary American readers who would remember the fall of Bataan or Saigon or British readers who would remember Singapore. Unlike Dunkirk very few escaped. Fortunately for the reader Lewrie's adventures don't end there. We know his escapades will continue through several more books. Perhaps this will be the darkest entry of the series.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I found it!!!!!!!!!!!!
Review: Fans of this series have been stumped by this book's continuing unavailability and the unfulfilled publisher's promises to put out a paperback copy. Well I finally found this book at the local library in the LARGE PRINT fiction section. It is published by G.K.Hall who also have published the eighth in the series, Jester's Fortune in a large print addition. So check it out at your local library or ask them to order it. It is every bit as good as the others in the series so it is not on account of quality that it has been mysteriously made unavailable. If only the author would stop confusing sex with acrobatics!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Why can't I get this book?
Review: I have read the entire series of Alan Lewrie novels EXCEPT THIS ONE! According to other reviews it was supposed to become available again in June or July of 1999. It is now the end of January 2001 and I STILL CAN'T GET IT! I am a huge fan of the series as (apparently) are a lot of other people. We are all stymied by our inability to get this book. What's up at the publishers???

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Grim defeat in the Americas
Review: The French Admiral in paper has been awaited by Alan Lewrie fans since 1990. It is the crucial #2 "missing link" from early in the series of Alan's swashbuckling adventures in the age of fighting sail. Although we know the general events of this long-missing novel about the Royal Navy from references in succeeding books, it comes as a throwback to the exciting rakehell that Lewrie was early in his career. The alleged orphan [] of a scheming English knight, Lewrie has a most modest opinion of himself, although he comes of age as a mariner in the course of this pivotal novel. American readers will be most interested that this novel takes place on the Eastern Seaboard, especially during the crucial siege of Cornwallis' troops at York Town. (From the detailed sailing descriptions in the Chesapeake Bay it's a good bet that Lambdin sails there often.) This story offers a chance for an extended look, from the British point of view, at the vicious enmities and fighting that characterized the American Revolution in the genteel South. It does not, however, offer the least personal glimpse of the French Admiral. That august and triumphant sailor, the shipbound Admiral de Grasse, is instrumental in the series of British blunders and defeats that lose the rebel American colonies to England.

The language is a bit rougher than is the salty talk customary in sea stories by genuine British authors. I wonder if Lambdin chose "Lewrie" as his hero's name because it resembles lurid and lewd, which Alan is, although he's not a scoundrel as well. This is a physically bigger book than the other Lambdin pb's I've read, thanks to the customarily expansive McBooks Press edition (i.e., larger type and better paper than the stubby Fawcett Crest/Ballantine editions).

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Better and better . . .
Review: This is the second installment in what is developing into quite an enjoyable naval series. In _The King's_ Coat, Alan Lewrie, an illegitimate sixteen-year-old London rakehell, was essentially forced into going to sea in 1779 as a midshipman after being framed by his moneygrubbing father and his two half-siblings. He had a very rocky start in his new career but was beginning to learn his trade and had made a few friends, as well as more than a few enemies. He had also managed to come to the notice of at least two men of note, and well-placed interest was always paramount in advancing one's naval future. And there was the gorgeous young Lucy Beauman in Antiqua to whom he began paying court. Now it's two years since he left England and the rebellion in America is drawing to a close, buoyed by incompetence on the part of the British army and navy. And in the process, Alan finds himself trapped like a rat with Cornwallis at Yorktown. He escapes the disaster, partly through chance, partly through the aid of some Loyalist militia, and partly through his own intelligence and unexpected competence. By the end of the book, his future has improved in several important ways, both professionally and personally, and he has become a harder sort of person than he was at the beginning. And there's a new love interest, whether he wants to think so or not. Lambdin offers a welcome antidote to the rather proper style of Hornblower and even Audrey -- his sailors swear fulsomely, his protagonists can be just as narrowminded as anyone else in their society -- but he certainly knows his naval lore. And just when you're settling in to an adventurous episode, something horrible happens to remind you of just how bloody a true civil war the glorious American Revolution really was.


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