Author:Alexander Kent
If you like Patrick O'Brian and C. S. Forester, you will love this all-guns-blazing naval page-turner from multi-million copy seller Alexander Kent - guaranteed to have you hooked from page one!
'One of our foremost writers of naval fiction' -- Sunday Times
'Shipwreck, survival ... a spirited battle ... a splendid yarn' -- The Times
'Gripping to the end' -- ***** Reader review
'Difficult to put down' -- ***** Reader review
'Superb' -- ***** Reader review
'Riveting' -- ***** Reader review
'Exceptionally well written' -- ***** Reader review
'What a story!' -- ***** Reader review
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1804: England stands alone against France and the fleets of Spain, expecting an invasion any day. Entrusted with an urgent mission for the King, Vice-Admiral Richard Bolitho hoists his flag above the veteran seventy-four-gun ship Hyperion and sets sail with a new squadron for the Caribbean.
Plagued by the knowledge that both his troubled marriage and the eye injured in his last battle with Contre-Amiral Jobert are worsening, Bolitho is eager to leave England less than three months after his return home. But even his beloved old ship Hyperion, hastily restored from an ignominious existence as a hulk, is full of tormenting memories and lost faces.
Having navigated several battles along the way, he is roused in Antigua from his darkness of soul by the rediscovery of a passion which defies convention and every risk to his reputation.
His future is full of uncertainty as he sails east to Gibraltar, for a rendezvous that all who follow his flag will remember...
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—— StylistLiterature for the Twitter generation
—— Big IssueHeart-wrenching... A searing indictment of a culture that downplays and covers up horrors... Harrowing, deeply moving and richly insightful, this is Scudamore’s best novel yet
—— Philip Womack , Financial TimesThe pages bubble with quiet rage about an elite education system that wrecks even those it elevates... Scudamore is here for the long haul
—— John Self , SpectatorThere are few prizes that Scudamore hasn’t been nominated for, and English Monsters will only add to his impressive tally… Scudamore’s insights are keen and his masterfully evocative writing never less than assured… His descriptions of [Max’s schooldays] etch themselves into your brain
—— Daily MailWritten in cool, clear-eyed prose, English Monsters is a taut psychological thriller and an astute comment on the institutional neuroses that now haunt our nation
—— Amanda Craig , Daily TelegraphEnglish Monsters is a tremendously moving novel. What can be done in the face of unspeakable and complicated trauma? What if silence, action, vengeance and loyalty fail the person in need? James Scudamore has given us a timely, provocative work allowing past and present, with all their truths and apprehensions, to shift like rising waters.
—— Madeleine ThienScudamore deftly balances creepiness and tenderness…while retaining a cool anger at the imperial mindset that the boarding school system cultivates… English Monsters is one of the most well-observed novels I’ve read on the way that childhood abuse lingers into adulthood.
—— Johanna Thomas-Corr , Observer[English Monsters] has echoes of Edward St Aubyn’s (more sardonic) Patrick Melrose series and Hanya Yanagihara’s (more lurid) A Little Life. It contains resonant phrases...on almost every page
—— Sunday TimesEnglish Monsters has the pace and intensity of the best kind of thriller, married to an almost unbearable poignancy. I've never read a novel as good and wise on trauma as it moves through the generations, but with such a light touch. There are moments in it that will stay with me forever
—— Evie WyldA slow-burn chiller... An intelligent novel in which the horror lies not in explicit scenes of cruelty but rather in Scudamore’s lack of squeamishness about his subject’s queasier psychological corners
—— Anthony Cummins , MetroDark, tender, troubling... It is impossible to read these pages and not to think of the present blight of emotionally cauterised boarding-school politicians whose various pathologies, fantasies and defence mechanisms Britain must continue to endure... [English Monsters] render[s] the dense and knotted contours of pain and shame and guilt in the hearts of the victims...with commendable imaginative skill and honesty.
—— Edward Docx , GuardianA very impressive novel. Scudamore lightly, deftly conjures the closed world of an institution in which the men who spin the boys’ future are both magicians and monsters. The damage of patriarchy plays down the generations, its story told by a young outsider who more or less got away
—— Sarah MossI'd like to recommend...James Scudamore's English Monsters, a beautifully written meditation on the kind of English masculinity from which out current leaders suffer.
—— Sarah Moss , Times Literary SupplementScudamore is skilled at creating atmosphere… A gripping meditation on class relations and formative friendships.
—— Laura Paterson , Irish NewsFrom the very title, English Monsters is politely merciless about that most English of traits, suppression. On relationships it is heartfelt and unshirking. What stays with me most though is the tenderness at the heart of the novel. Love we don't choose, that is just there; and how this throws all those loves we try to engineer into the wind
—— Cynan JonesScudamore has an eye for physical details… His ear for comforting platitudes, especially those between men and boys, is also unerring.
—— Sarah Hayes , Tablet, *Novel of the Week*Reminiscent of Donna Tartt’s The Secret History and The Hiding Game by Naomi Wood, both in its anachronistic narrative structure and plot... Worth reading for fans of coming-of-age novels.
—— Carola Huttmann , BookmunchScudamore is deft at capturing the way in which you can be drawn to someone despite knowing the worst of them. There is a bitter acknowledgement that monsters come in many forms - and many are difficult to resist.
—— Sarah Hughes , iSteeped in violence and secrecy… This exploration of the long-term effects of abuse…is both convincing and chilling.
—— Mernie Gilmore , Daily Express[An] affecting depiction of the dark side of Englishness
—— Nicholas Clee , Times Literary SupplementA disquieting coming-of-age tale that, in many passages, unfurls like an English comedy of manners – only one that, at any time, can suddenly be darkened by long shadows.
—— Thomas Marks , Literary Review