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To Glory We Steer
To Glory We Steer
May 6, 2025 6:46 PM

Author:Alexander Kent

To Glory We Steer

Multi-million copy seller Alexander Kent, brings us another all-action Bolitho adventure. If you're a fan of Patrick O'Brian and C. S. Forester, then this is the book for you!

'Alexander Kent is certainly as good as Forester was in action, and in the wheeling movement of sails.' -- Sunday Times

'A salty testament to the mystique and the brutality of the square-rigger.' -- New York Times Book Review

'Alexander Kent...is, above all, a superb story-teller.' -- Manchester Evening News

'This is a classic story of triumph over adversity and I thoroughly enjoyed re-reading it' -- ***** Reader review

'Couldn't put it down' -- ***** Reader review

'It's action from start to finish with twists and turns to keep the reader guessing and wanting more' -- ***** Reader review

'A brilliant, exciting read'-- ***** Reader review

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1782: British Captain Richard Bolitho is ordered to take the frigate Phalarope to the Caribbean, where the hard-pressed royal squadrons are fighting for their lives against the combined fleets of France and Spain and the upstart American privateers. It should have been a proud moment for so young and junior a captain - but the Phalarope has already been driven to near mutiny and she is regarded with shame and suspicion.

But Bolitho is no ordinary man and his efforts to give the ship back her pride mark him apart from his contemporaries. As the little frigate sails under the blazing sun and battles enemies within and without, Bolitho spares neither himself nor his men - and in the final great battle of the Saintes, the chance comes to prove what both he and the Phalarope can achieve.

Bolitho's adventures continue in Command a King's Ship.

Reviews

'Wonderfully-imagined...Richly atmospheric, stunningly graphic, intense and extraordinary'

—— NELSON DEMILLE

'A cracking, fast-paced contemporary re-telling of the legend that is Alexander ... Pressfield brings him alive for the modern audience with the verve and skill with which he conjured the heroes of Thermopylae in Gates of Fire.'

—— MANDA SCOTT

'If you want to know what it might have felt like to ride into battle with Alexander, read this striking book...blends a scholar's accuracy and a novelist's eye.'

—— BARRY STRAUSS, author of Salamis

'Pressfield has tackled a subject worthy of his enormous talent...and triumphed again.'

—— STEPHEN COONTS

'Deeply researched, dashingly written...this is a a terrific performance'

—— INDEPENDENT

'As all-conqueringly glamorous an account as Alexander himself'

—— SIMON SEBAG MONTEFIORE , DAILY TELEGRAPH 'Books of the Year'

'The acclaimed chronicler of Ancient Greek warriors tells of the mightiest of all...Pressfield succeeds quite brilliantly where a lesser novelist might stumble, enabling the legend to meet the man... [he] excels in depicting the blood, guts, glory and shame'

—— GOOD BOOK GUIDE

An important as well as a thrilling work of art

—— Independent on Sunday

A moving and powerful novel in which Dunmore employs all her celebrated descriptive and narrative skills...beautiful

—— Daily Mail

A harrowing, urgent narrative of cold, starvation and the battle to survive

—— Sunday Times

It is quite outstanding, full of beauty, pain and truth... We are lucky to have this book

—— Anne Chisholm , Sunday Telegraph

The facts surrounding the discovery of this book are as remarkable as its contents are magnificent... A triumph of indomitability and a masterwork of literary accomplishment

—— Sunday Times

Deftly translated by Sandra Smith, this is possibly the most devastating indictment of French manners and morals since Madame Bovary, as hypnotic as Proust at the biscuit tin, as gruelling as Genet on the prowl. Irène Nemirovsky is, on this evidence, a novelist of the very first order, perceptive to a fault and sly in her emotional restraint

—— Evening Standard

An heroic attempt to write a novel about a nightmare in which the author is entirely embedded

—— Anita Brookner , Spectator

Read this haunting novel, then read [Nemirovsky’s] letters in this edition to feel the full force of the work

—— Fiona Wilson , The Times

While marked by poppy wearing and memorial ceremonies, the First World War is also sustained through family history, handed down from one generation to the next. No book better articulates the impact of this narrative than Stephen Faulks’ Birdsong.

—— Lucy Middleton , Reader's Digest

A truly amazing read

—— Gail Teasdale , 24housing

I’d never read such descriptive literature, and couldn’t sleep at night for thinking about what I’d just read. His [Faulks] portrayal of terror on the battlefield is so powerful

—— Anna Redman , Good Housekeeping

My all-time favourite book

—— Kate Garraway , Good Housekeeping
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