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Heart Of Oak
Heart Of Oak
Jun 16, 2025 6:55 AM

Author:Alexander Kent

Heart Of Oak

It is February 1818, and Adam Bolitho longs for marriage and a safe personal harbour. But with so much of Britain's fleet redundant, he knows he is fortunate to be offered H.M.S. Onward, a new 38-gun frigate whose first mission is not war but diplomacy, as consort to the French frigate Nautilus.

Under the burning sun of North Africa, Bolitho is keenly aware of the envy and ambition among his officers, the troubled, restless spirits of his midshipmen, and the old enemy's proximity. It is only when Nautilus becomes a sacrificial offering on the altar of empire that every man discovers the brotherhood of the sea is more powerful than the bitter memories of an ocean of blood and decades of war.

Reviews

One of our foremost writers of naval fiction

—— The Sunday Times

As you would expect, Kent is a dab hand at plotting and at action scenes, and this novel is another accomplished performance from the old man of the sea

—— The First Post

The storytelling has an easy mastery; the prose is lean and muscular, without a word wasted. How well Kent knows his stuff! Not just the jargon of the high seas - the pawls and maintops and the quarter-boats and the catheads - but the psychology of naval men in uniform

—— Sunday Telegraph

Unforgettable… Gaël Faye’s talent is breathtaking; no country that can give the world a writer like him should ever be called small

—— Imbolo Mbue, author of Behold the Dreamers

as beautiful as it is painful... It's easy to see why it set the French literary scene alight. This is one you won't be abandoning in the hotel library when you leave.

—— Sam Baker , The Pool

a masterpiece in bringing home the first-hand realities of war... It's heart-wrenching and beautiful and distressingly authentic. Everyone should read it.

—— The Pool

This beautiful coming-of-age novel conveys a heart-rending desire for peace and harmony. It sets forth a vision of the world that is poetic rather than political, where horror is displaced by wonder.

—— Le Figaro

A magnificent book… a master-stroke of a first novel

—— Le Parisien

Precise and potent...deeply affecting... The juxtaposition of everyday growing pains and the fallout from atrocities is heightened by Faye's lovely prose, which builds a heartrending portrait of the end of childhood

—— Publishers Weekly

Gaël Faye’s words are a mix of such precision, gentleness and gravitas that finishing this first novel feels like coming out of a heartrending embrace.

—— Le Point

A very personal and intimate novel about an African childhood cut through by socio-political turbulence… Gaël Faye has evoked the darkest pages of contemporary Africa without tipping into pathos

—— Alain Mabanckou, author of Broken Glass

A literary revelation, subtle and powerful

—— Elle

Gael Faye is a revelation. Small Country is a luminous and poignant novel about childhood, war, exile and identity… this is literature at its most powerful

—— Le Parisien Magazine

Triumphant

—— le Journal du Dimanche

Writing that is beautiful, sad and funny. A poetic ‘cry to the world’ about the existence of Gabriel, his family, his friends and everyone else. Before they became “a bunch of exiles, refugees, immigrants and migrants"

—— Charlie Hebdo

a melancholic tale of a paradise lost

—— Grazia

In the summer months, there are two categories of books: those we take on holiday and leave behind in the sand, and those that make their mark on us for life. Small Country by Gaël Faye is firmly part of the latter category.

—— Le Matin Dimanche

A literary phenomenon

—— Mehdi Ba , Jeune Afrique

Small Country is a big novel

—— Canard Enchainé

The dizzying enterprise of a childhood reclaimed… [Gaël Faye] has understood how to put words on this earth that cannot be summed up by a mass grave

—— Le Temps

Gaël Faye makes us smile, despite the seriousness of his words

—— Médiapart

What is autobiographical, and what imagined? In the end it doesn’t matter, when he Gaël Faye gives life to the lost land of his childhood, with poetry and modesty

—— Agence France Presse Mondiales

Small Country is a stirring and graceful tale of stolen innocence and fragmented identity. Hopeful, raw and deeply human, it is a modern classic in the making.

—— France Today

An excellent novel, a model of restraint and quiet literary sophistication

—— The Times

Cherry, Nico Walker’s outstanding debut, is a hard-hitting, ghoulishly funny novel about drug addiction, war and bank robbery.

—— Washington Post

Heartbreaking, unadorned, radically absent of pretense, Cherry is the debut novel America needs now, a letter from the frontlines of opioid addiction and, almost subliminally, a war story.

—— Lea Carpenter, author of Eleven Days and Red, White, Blue

Nico Walker’s Cherry is a wrenching, clear-eyed stare-down into the abyss of war, addiction and crime, a dark tumble into scumbaggery, but it’s also deeply humane and truly funny. That is one of the reasons I love it so much: it makes you laugh and ache at the same time, in the manner of the great Denis Johnson.

—— Dan Chaon, author of Ill Will

One of the most exciting new American novelists.

—— Men's Journal

Heavily indebted to the profane blood, guts, bullets, and opiate-strewn absurdities dreamed up by Thomas McGuane, Larry Brown, and Barry Hannah, Cherry tells a story that feels infinitely more real, and undeniably tougher than the rest.

—— A.V. Club

A bruising dispatch from the frontline of the American opioid crisis… the final quarter [of Cherry] rushes by in a cold sweat.

—— Anthony Cummins , Daily Mail

[An] incendiary debut… Nico Walker writes with real rhythm, exhibiting a poet’s discrimination about adjectival choice and the relative length of clauses. It is a rare and remarkable achievement to turn such suffering into a novel of such finely calibrated beauty.

—— Lucian Robinson , Times Literary Supplement

A gritty, addictive read.

—— Chloe Cherry , Face

I think everyone should read it – it is so horrific.

—— Kirsty Wark , Lady

A well-received return to form

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily Express

Astonishingly bold novel… [It] is Amis’s best work in years

—— Mail on Sunday

Amis’s best work since Money

—— Richard Susskind , The Times
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