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The Wake of the Lorelei Lee: A Bloody Jack Adventure
Ditulis oleh L. A. Meyer
Narasi oleh Katherine Kellgren
Tindakan Buku
Mulai Mendengarkan- Penerbit:
- Listen & Live Audio
- Dirilis:
- Jan 1, 2010
- ISBN:
- 9781593164867
- Format:
- Buku Audio
Deskripsi
Jacky Faber - rich from her exploits diving for Spanish gold - has purchased the Lorelei Lee to carry passengers across the Atlantic. Believing she has been absolved of past sins against the Crown, Jacky docks in London to take on her crew, but is instead arrested and sentenced to life in the newly formed penal colony in Australia. To add insult to injury, the Lorelei Lee is confiscated to carry Jacky and more than 200 female convicts to populate New South Wales.
Not one to give in to self pity, Jacky rallies her sisters to "better" their position - resulting in wild escapades, brushes with danger, and much hilarity. Will Jacky find herself a founding mother of New South Wales, Australia? Not if she has anything to do about it!
L. A. Meyer received a master of fine arts from Boston University, and is currently the curator and exhibitor at the Clair de Loon Gallery in Bar Harbor, Maine. He lives in Corea, Maine. Katherine Kellgren has recorded over 60 audio-books including Bloody Jack, which won an Audie Award, a Publishers Weekly Listen Up Award, and ForeWord magazine's Audio-book of the Year.
Spend some more time with Bloody Jack.
©2011 L. A. Meyer (P)2011 Listen & Live Audio, Inc.
Informasi Buku
The Wake of the Lorelei Lee: A Bloody Jack Adventure
Ditulis oleh L. A. Meyer
Narasi oleh Katherine Kellgren
Deskripsi
Jacky Faber - rich from her exploits diving for Spanish gold - has purchased the Lorelei Lee to carry passengers across the Atlantic. Believing she has been absolved of past sins against the Crown, Jacky docks in London to take on her crew, but is instead arrested and sentenced to life in the newly formed penal colony in Australia. To add insult to injury, the Lorelei Lee is confiscated to carry Jacky and more than 200 female convicts to populate New South Wales.
Not one to give in to self pity, Jacky rallies her sisters to "better" their position - resulting in wild escapades, brushes with danger, and much hilarity. Will Jacky find herself a founding mother of New South Wales, Australia? Not if she has anything to do about it!
L. A. Meyer received a master of fine arts from Boston University, and is currently the curator and exhibitor at the Clair de Loon Gallery in Bar Harbor, Maine. He lives in Corea, Maine. Katherine Kellgren has recorded over 60 audio-books including Bloody Jack, which won an Audie Award, a Publishers Weekly Listen Up Award, and ForeWord magazine's Audio-book of the Year.
Spend some more time with Bloody Jack.
©2011 L. A. Meyer (P)2011 Listen & Live Audio, Inc.
- Penerbit:
- Listen & Live Audio
- Dirilis:
- Jan 1, 2010
- ISBN:
- 9781593164867
- Format:
- Buku Audio
Tentang penulis
Terkait dengan The Wake of the Lorelei Lee
Ulasan
...Well it sure as hell isn't in this novel!
This, along with the almost too fantastical situations, is a great frustration to fans of Bloody Jack. Jacky Faber has been in one too many crazy adventures it seems, and her luck can certainly stretch your patience. Oh sure--she's been tarred and feathered, had a cigar burned into her thigh, had friends die and suffer...but has SHE died? Been raped? Lost an arm or suffered some other injury? Been cast into destitution? Not really. No, our Jacky is like a cat with nine lives, and at this point, readers are almost hoping that the series will end at book numero nine, just so that things aren't stretched to their breaking point. After all, there is only so much one can take!
But so far this review has been a bit...self-deprecating? Ironic? I say this because while I personally share in the frustrations faced by many long-time Bloody Jack readers, I have to say...I still love it!
The characters are fresh and strong, and though the plot can be a bit much to take, it's still great fun to read. Isn't that the point of a book? To entertain? L.A. Meyer's eighth addition to the series is filled with laughs and thrills and fun new characters for the loyal reader to enjoy. Its play on history is not the worst I've seen--Mississipi Jack asked for a lot more in the way of suspension of disbelief than the Lorelei Lee--and its very much forgivable. I blasted through this, and was left hungry for more.
So...Really, I don't see myself writing this rant for the sake of a new reader looking to get into Bloody Jack. In fact, I'd warn any new readers from starting here--that'd just be silly. Better to start at the beginning, to experience all the laughs, see where many of the characters come from, and share in us veteran readers everlasting lament!
Truly, this is one of my favourite series' ever. It's remarkable consistent. The books are pretty fast reads. The writing is excellent (any qualms taken against it should note that it is in character and hardly needs to be pristine.) Jacky Faber's adventures are truly a joy to read and I have enjoyed each and every instalment thus far.
To be quite honest, i think this was my favourite one since Under the Jolly Rodger. (I'm kind of in love with pirates, you know. Kind of in love)
Now, these books seem to have a rule. Something really really bad happens either in the beginning, or right at the very last few pages, or both. I'm not going to really divulge all about wherein these things take part in this particular book. However, once again, our dear Jacky does find herself arrested and nearly hanged. The girl has escaped the noose more times than Jack Sparrow, i swear.
In this book we have a floating brothel, a whole lot of people arrested, transportation to Australia, Chinese pirates, a few certain characters FINALLY going pirate (FINALLY) and all of the usual beautiful raucous rampaging that the Bloody Jack books are known for.
The thing i adore so much about these books are that not only are they fun to read and incredibly enjoyable, the characters are always consistent, (Jacky is simply one of the GREATEST female protagonists ever) the stories are always slightly outrageous, and yet they always retain their historic accuracy. L.A. Meyer is simply spot on with all the little intricate historic details that this book requires, from the events of the time period, to the parts of the ship. Really, this is one of the only books i've read where the parts of the ship are always called by their sea faring names because the author obviously knows what they are.
I also love how these books are written. One could argue that the style is too simplistic, however they have such life in energy because they're written in Jacky's point of view. And really, if you know Jacky Faber's personality, the stories are written exactly the way she'd like them. Which is just showing how perfectly written they are, because they match the character narrating to a T. Everything in the book you can see Jacky writing down herself. Unlike some first person books where the writing style does not quite match with the character narrating, these books are always so Jacky, and Jacky is such a distinctive character that to write them any other way would be odd.
I won't reveal what occurs on the romantic ends of this particular instalment, because anyone who has read any of the books is aware that they are a never ending story of Jacky and Jaimy ALMOST FINALLY being together and one of them gets arrested (well... that's usually how it happens...)
Really though, this book was easily one of the best yet. Really, they just keep getting better and better. From the floating brothel that Jacky quickly charms her way to the highest points, to the Chinese pirates, who are an incredibly intriguing addition to the story and i am quite looking forward to what Meyer intends to do with them in the future, as by the title of the upcoming book it appears that they are definitely returning for another go. I'm so glad that this was an impulse buy for me. This series never disappoints and as always is an absolute pleasure to read.
These books are a fun romp - there is not so much action in this one - less violence and rather more sex - albeit between the lines, although the language is not entirely suitable for the younger reader. One cannot help but feel slightly uncomfortable at the thought that the writer is a man, and one cannot help but wonder if he has a bit of a crush on his Jacky, for all her flirtateous foibles and seemingly loose morals (but not really, her vitue is still intact at the start of the voyage, you'll have to read it to find out if that is so by the end). It reminds me of Piers Anthony - this mild obsession with female undergarments and young ladies of a particularly uninhibited nature.
In other things, the author relies a lot on coincedence with his plots - Jacky must surely led a charmed life - except obviously charmed by someone with a wry sense of humour. There are also some rather dark moments in this book. A lot of it does not come over as particularly credible and I suspect the historical accuracy is minimal. Then again, if you've got this far in the series, you will have come to the conclusion that historical accuracy is not the intent of the plot at all.
More of the same, though this installment gives some new twists: Jacky finally gets married (and not to her beloved Jaimy!), and shares smooches with another someone who isn't Jaimy--and this time, it's a girl pirate! Jacky, you are so very hard on your friends!
(The number of real-world characters included here reminds me of the sequel to Forrest Gump, where Forrest had his hands in everything from The Exxon-Valdez spill to New Coke.)