Showing posts with label ahoy matey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ahoy matey. Show all posts

Sunday, November 14, 2021

NetGalley ARC | The Hunt for Blackbeard: The World's Most Notorious Pirate

I received a free digital copy from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Rating ⭐

Short Version:

His real name was probably Edward Teach. He did bad stuff. He lit his beard on fire to scare the bejeezus out of his prey. He died. We don't know many actual facts about Blackbeard so we're going to repeat ourselves constantly and make guesses. The end.

Marginally Longer Version:

The title is misleading if you don't sit and think about it for a minute. Given the fact that there is so little actual information known about the most notorious pirate who ever lived, it makes sense that the authors had to scour documents of the period for any information about him, seeing as how there's been nothing discovered in his own hand.

Even then, I was expecting more.

We learn far more about the "Golden Age of Piracy" and the other major and minor players than we do about Blackbeard. Anything that is verifiable is stuff we already know, there's no great cache of new information. The book, then, isn't really about him. It does nothing to penetrate the 300 years worth of legend and myth that has grown since his death. I wanted know to more about how his legend grew, how were the stories about him spread, and by whom, until he became this larger-than-life character that some people don't even know was a real person?

Pass.

Sunday, May 30, 2021

NetGalley ARC | Hunting the Last Great Pirate: Benito de Soto and the Rape of the Morning Star

 

I received a free digital ARC from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Rating ⭐⭐⭐

A book that I anticipated to breeze through because, HELLOOOO! PIRATES! ended up taking me a few months and that was incredibly disappointing. I just could not get into this book.

It has all the makings of a fantastic story - an unarmed Quaker vessel carrying a couple dozen men, women, and children traveling in a protected convoy, on its way to pick up injured British soldiers and return them home. Unfortunately the ship also contained heavy crates of recovered treasures, which slowed the ship down considerably, making it a prime target for the likes of Benito de Soto or any other pirate captain with a sharp eye out for plunder that day.

As soon a de Soto and his men had taken what they wanted from the ship after executing the captain and crew, they locked the survivors in the hold and set the ship on fire. They fled with their spoils to Spain.

De Soto returned to his former village in Galicia, Spain, to bury his portion of the stolen treasure. He then set out for Gibraltar to sell other items he'd stolen. Bad move on his part, since the British still controlled Gibraltar at that time and he was recognized, despite using forged documents claiming a different identity. De Soto was arrested and put on trial, despite circumstantial evidence at best and no eyewitnesses who could definitely say that they saw him commanding the pirate crew. Even so, he was convicted and executed by hanging in the early 1830s. Nearly 100 years later, the court was proven correct when, in 1926, excavations and renovations in Galicia uncovered the treasure de Soto had buried there before heading off to Gibraltar.

Now, you might be wondering how it was possible for de Soto to even be arrested for his attack on the Morning Star, considering his men set it on fire and left everyone for dead. Turns out, due to one incredibly fearless woman in particular, she was able to lead the others into figuring a way out and miraculously, the Morning Star slowly but surely made its way to port. Word spread rapidly about what had transpired.

Yet, after all of that, still only three stars and I'll tell you why - it was not an exciting book. It was beyond dry in the telling of it and I could not force myself to keep reading for very long periods at a time. I don't understand it, as the story is captivating. As someone who primarily reads non-fiction, I tend to love books that others consider dry, and I find them absolutely riveting. Yet, not so with this one.

This was an absolutely horrific account of the violence and cruelty meted out by pirates across the globe. It is not the charming silliness of Jack Sparrow and his motley crew, and one should not expect that in reading about real pirates - vicious and merciless hunters who had no qualms about killing anyone they chose. But even so, I expected that story to still be engaging. The story lulled at times, especially in the aftermath.

Overall I would not say this is a bad book or that you should avoid it. There is much information here about the incident itself, de Soto's capture/trial/execution, the realities of life at sea in the 19th century. Just understand going in that if you are looking for Jack Sparrow, you will definitely not find him here.