Just Finished Reading :
The Far Side of the World by Patrick O’Brian
The Western Mediterranean :
1812. Captain Jack Aubrey (played by Russell Crowe in the 2003 movie adaptation
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World) is looking with regret at the
probable end of his navy career and the breaking up of his beloved frigate
Surprise. Awaiting orders to return to England
he is given instead orders to pursue and engage an enemy frigate reported to be
making its way to the Southern Pacific ocean
in order to endanger the British whaling fleet based there. But to find such a
mall target after a voyage of thousands of miles with a mixed crew of old salts
and new recruits will test all of his abilities to the limit and that is even
before they attempt to cross the treacherous waters of Cape
Horn .
Despite not being Russell Crowe’s biggest fan I enjoyed this
naval romp at the movies and even picked up the DVD once it hit the cheap box.
So when I had the opportunity to pick up the 1984 novel I did so expecting a story
of tense naval warfare in the Napoleonic Age. Without going into too much
detail or giving too much away I really didn’t get what I expected. The first
thing that jumped out at me was the rather fundamental difference in Aubrey’s
enemy. In the movie it was quite clearly a French frigate up to no good
although it had been built – if memory serves – in Boston . In the book the frigate was American
and rather than being based during the Napoleonic War was instead based during
The War of 1812 when Britain
and American were at war with each other. As I read more and more of this
comparatively brief novel (running to just over 340 pages) it dawned on me that
this was a completely different story than that portrayed on film. Apart from
the main players (including the good Doctor Maturin played by Paul Bettany) and
the bare facts of the plot it transpired that nothing else made it from the
book to the screen. That didn’t, however, make this any less interesting or
readable. Within a handful of pages I found myself hooked by the early 19th
Century language (gleaned from actual Admiralty reports apparently) and the
completely unapologetic – and unexplained apart from a detailed diagram in the
preface – use of sailing terms used at the time. It did take a little while to
get my head around the terminology but by the half way mark I was pretty
confident that I could tell the difference between a studdingsail and a top
gallant. Of course I already knew my jibs from my spankers but then who
doesn’t?
4 comments:
That book was sitting on my dining room table last week. I don't know where it is now, maybe I carted it upstairs to the book shelf with all the other books I haven't found time to read yet. Some day. Sigh.
I've been told that the movie squished several plots together. Its full title was "Master and Commander: the Far Side of the World", but Master and Commander is the first novel in the Aubrey-Maturin series, while this may be set...later.
I've tried several times to read Master and Commander, but every time I get tangled up in all the sails and ropes and so on.
v v said: That book was sitting on my dining room table last week.
That's spooky.... [grin]
v v said: maybe I carted it upstairs to the book shelf with all the other books I haven't found time to read yet. Some day. Sigh.
I know the feeling...
sc said: I've been told that the movie squished several plots together.
I think that it must have.
sc said: I've tried several times to read Master and Commander, but every time I get tangled up in all the sails and ropes and so on.
FSotW is certainly a 'technical' book in the sense. It probably helped with the historical authenticity but it was hard going to begin with. If I'd read this - or tried to read this - in my teens I'd have probably abandoned it.
I was just toying with grabbing the audiobook of one of this series a couple days ago. Based on your review, I think I shall.
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