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Pirate Legend
Well, the first few chapters are a bit slow, but that of course is how most books are. Mainly setting up a little back story and introducing main characters, there is a LOT of potential in what I read from those first few chapters. The last few pages that they posted on line are about to the point where things really start to take off! The opening chapters feature a pretty good description of Port Royal and the political climate between Spain and England, oh yes, and a pirate hanging! I now also know how to treat gout and baldness! :
I ran across this review from The Washington Post this morning if you want to find out a little more about the book. I didn't read all of the review though, i am trying to hold of till the book actually gets here so I can read it for myself!
You can read the rest of the review here :
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/24/AR2009112403201.html
I ran across this review from The Washington Post this morning if you want to find out a little more about the book. I didn't read all of the review though, i am trying to hold of till the book actually gets here so I can read it for myself!
Thriller king's lost booty
PIRATE LATITUDES
By Michael Crichton
Harper.
312 pp. $27.99
Hoist the Jolly Roger above the bestseller list, ye mateys, 'cause Michael Crichton has just published a swashbuckling pirate thriller. The popular author of "Jurassic Park" and "The Andromeda Strain" went to Davy Jones's locker last November, but his assistant found a finished draft of "Pirate Latitudes" on his computer, and Harper has plundered this booty like a chest of gold doubloons that washed up on shore. The first print run is a million copies, and Steven Spielberg has already signed on to produce the inevitable movie version, so drop sail and prepare to be boarded.
Although plenty of novels are ripped to shreds in Hollywood's shark-infested waters, "Pirate Latitudes" should enjoy smooth sailing to the silver screen. This hilariously exciting book already reads like a film treatment, jumping from one cinematic, doom-filled episode to the next as it cuts its bloody way through the encyclopedia of piracy from "Ahoy" to "Yo-ho-ho."
Crichton opens the story in 1665 in "a miserable, overcrowded, cutthroat-infested town" on the island of Jamaica, a wealthy if precarious British settlement deep in Spanish territory. King Charles II has signed a fragile treaty with Spain, but English pirates -- who euphemistically call themselves "privateers" -- continue to operate whenever and wherever opportunity arises. "Let me explain to you certain pertinent facts," the governor says in a rather too clunky bit of exposition, but tell your inner 14-year-old to hang on: Once we get past this first section, "Pirate Latitudes" howls along till the very last page.
You can read the rest of the review here :
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/24/AR2009112403201.html