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Under Drake's Flag: A Tale of the Spanish Main

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$115.89
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Book Overview

Adventure on the high seas as seen through the eyes of young Ned Hearne, who experiences a harsh seafaring life, visits strange lands, and witnesses the destruction of the Spanish Armada. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Tea With Terroists

Extreamly awaking to the problems that exist today that should put all that read this book with an open mind and apply some effort to correct our mistakes. Cut off the supply of money to Arabian states. No more Oil purchases from Arabian controled teritory. Be willing to pay more for gas or even go to gas rationing. Develope fuel from unused crops and other waiste products...

Fuel for the imagination!!!

I read this out loud to my 11 and 8 year olds. They both LOVED it! G. A. Henty has true eloquence with words, which I enjoyed, but the kids were just drawn in by the adventure! This was our first Henty novel, but it won't be our last! What a great way to learn history.

Really cool!

This is a great book! The adventure never lets up, and the charachters set good examples of manilness, dignity, and honor. I highly recommend it! It's a wonderful book to read aloud as a family or just by yourself.

Stories for boys, or how to go to war with the right spirit

In the early 90s, I came into possession of what I took to be a very nearly complete collection (I have 75 volumes), mostly in first or other early editions, of the British writer G. A. Henty. Henty died in 1902 or thereabouts, having written his last books about the actions which took place in the war opposing English troops and Boer commandos. And that was his formula, first and foremost to record in print the historical events associated with any British military venture from the early Middle Ages onwards. The other characteristic of his writing was, that it was intended for consumption by boys and as such it was typical of a genre that was well developed in the late Victorian period. Henty's prefaces invariably start, "My Dear Boys," and he developed a sort of intimacy with his youthful audience that eventually made him something of a best selling author at the end of last century. It is interesting to note that he is still in print, or was until very recently.Most of his books have a two-fold purpose therefore; recounting (mainly) military history and inculcating a certain notion of the standard of behaviour to be expected from a future young subaltern. No doubt, of the thousands of officers from British and colonial regiments who went to the front in 1915 and dashed themselves bravely against the German wall, a great many had had this form of early Henty training. Having read so many of them, one can scarcely recall the actual details of plots and sub-plots. Yet on the details of the history involved, there is much to learn, as Henty was a meticulous man who recorded as fully as possible (and some times too fully, it must be admitted, with respect to the endless movements of particular regiments into the line) the events he describes. He is equally good at sea as on land and has written some classics of maritime literature, particularly "Under Drake's Flag," and "Cochrane the Dauntless." So while Henty can hardly be expected to have a wide audience today, for those who find him to their taste, it must be said that the material, most of which will have to be located second hand, is not wanting.
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