A River in Borneo: A Tale of the East Indies

Author:   Richard Woodman
Publisher:   Globe Pequot Press
ISBN:  

9781493075164


Pages:   242
Publication Date:   08 September 2023
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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A River in Borneo: A Tale of the East Indies


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Overview

It is the summer of 1964 during the Far Eastern war euphemistically called ‘Confrontation’. A British Royal Marine patrol has orders to penetrate Indonesian Borneo to locate a river thought by Allied intelligence to be being used by the Indonesians to build up supplies before launching a major attack on Sarawak. Charged with this mission, Lieutenant Charles Kirton makes a most extraordinary discovery amid the dense mangrove swamps bordering a river in Borneo. Not only does this discovery enable Kirton to fulfill his mission but it is quite coincidentally intensely personal and unpleasantly macabre. From this highly-charged opening sequence, the story flashes back a century to 1867, revealing the truth behind this strange event, when young Henry Kirton, Second Officer of the auxiliary steamship River Tay, is dumped ashore in Singapore, badly injured by a fall from the rigging of his ship. Woodman’s compelling tale has echoes of Joseph Conrad.

Full Product Details

Author:   Richard Woodman
Publisher:   Globe Pequot Press
Imprint:   McBooks Press
Dimensions:   Width: 13.30cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 19.20cm
Weight:   0.263kg
ISBN:  

9781493075164


ISBN 10:   1493075160
Pages:   242
Publication Date:   08 September 2023
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Reviews

NetGalley Review: 5 stars Last updated on 14 Sep 2021 I have read quite a few Richard Woodman books, both fiction, including his fourteen Nathaniel Drinkwater books, and non-fiction, including The Sea Warriors. A River in Borneo betrays his experience as a novelist, his knowledge as a master mariner, and the research of a historian. It is a curiously old fashioned book with more than a hint of Joseph Conrad, tracing the path of a young British merchant officer from a crippling accident to a hopeful respite to inevitable doom. The language is elegant and the book is highly readable. I did not find the framing scenes, set in the 1960s and later, addictive and somewhat unlikely and melodramatic. That said, the book is well worth reading. Recommended. Thanks to NatGalley and the publisher for a copy in exchange for an honest review. -Evan Ladoucer, consumer reviewer NetGalley Review: 5 stars Last updated on 17 Oct 2021 This was a unique read in historical fiction, it was a unique time period used and the characters were really well done. I liked that the author worked with ships; it added to the book. -Kay McLeer, consumer reviewer A Wonderful Novel: 5 Stars A River in Borneo is a magnificent achievement from a consistently superb author. I have to admit that I've been a proselytizing Richard Woodman fan for at least 22 years, particularly in regard to his Nathaniel Drinkwater series set in the Wars of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars. Now I'm happy to report that with this latest, superb work the master shows he's still the master of historical fiction, intriguing plotting, smooth storytelling, nautical detail, and strong characterization. His Singapore (circa 1870) and its associated territories, waterways, and general environs of Maritime Southeast Asia and the East Indies are painted with great depth and vibrant color. Captain Woodman's main characters live and appeal to (at times even repel) the reader as real people struggling in challenging and harsh times. While reading I couldn't help comparing the issues and textures of the characters' lives to those of the dry American West (where I currently live) of the same time period. In particular I marveled in regard to the great opportunities as well as the great perils constantly at hand. Woodman's central character, Henry Kirton, wonderfully embodies this issue-in addition to being both a complex, charismatic and contradictory figure. I also enjoyed the movement between the three distinct time periods Captain Woodman weaves into his story: the main part in the East Indies around 1870; a prologue and epilogue taking place in the same area but in 1964; and an afterword in 2018. Another thing that I particularly admire in this novel, as well as all of Woodman's historical fiction, is the way (unlike a goodly number of other authors) he inserts his fabulous fictional stories and characters into real historical settings without making them intrusive. A River in Borneo is a brilliant and wonderful novel. I give it the highest recommendation possible and I hope that it receives the wide readership it deserves. -- Dr. Maturin


Author Information

"Captain Richard Martin Woodman retired in 1997 from a 37-year nautical career. His Nathaniel Drinkwater series is often compared to the work of the late Patrick O'Brian. Woodman lives in Harwich, England, and is the author of some two dozen nautical novels, as well as several nonfiction books. Unlike many other modern naval historical novelists, such as C.S. Forester or O'Brian, he has served afloat. He went to sea at the age of sixteen as an indentured midshipman and spent eleven years in command. His experience ranges from cargo-liners to ocean weather ships and specialist support vessels to yachts, square-riggers, and trawlers. Said Lloyd's List of his work: ""As always, Richard Woodman's story is closely based on actual historical events. All this we have come to expect—and he adds that special ambience of colourful credibility which makes his nautical novels such rattling good reads."""

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