Patrick O'Brian
Book 17 of the Aubrey/Maturin series
The Commodore
The seventeenth novel in the best-selling Aubrey/Maturin series of naval tales, which the New York Times Book Review has described as "the best historical novels ever written."
Having survived a long and desperate adventure in the
Great South Sea,
Captain Jack Aubrey and Stephen Maturin return to England to very different circumstances. For Jack it is a happy
homecoming, at least initially, but for Stephen it is disastrous: his little daughter appears to be autistic, incapable of
speech or contact, while his wife, Diana, unable to bear this situation, has disappeared, her house being looked after
by the widowed Clarissa Oakes.
Much of The Commodore takes place on land, in sitting rooms and in drafty castles, but the roar of the great guns is
never far from our hearing. Aubrey and Maturin are sent on a bizarre decoy mission to the fever-ridden lagoons of the
Gulf of Guinea to supress the slave trade. But their ultimate destination is Ireland, where the French are mounting
an invasion that will test Aubrey's seamanship and Maturin's resourcefulness as a secret intelligence agent.
The subtle interweaving of these disparate themes is an achievement of pure storytelling by one of our greatest living
novelists.
"The Commodore is so satisfying...because it is crowded with so many different kinds of pleasures. O'Brian's genius is in his ability to arrange all this material upon the well-constructed frame of an adventure plot....A lyric poet working in the epic form."John Ferguson, Boston Sunday Globe
In addition to twenty volumes in the highly respected Aubrey/Maturin series, Patrick O'Brian's many books include Testimonies, The Golden Ocean, and The Unknown Shore. O'Brian also wrote acclaimed biographies of Pablo Picasso and Sir Joseph Banks and translated many works from the French, among them the novels and memoirs of Simone de Beauvoir and Jean Lacouture's biographies of Charles de Gaulle. He passed away in January 2000 at the age of 85.
|


|