by J. H. Gelernter
(4/6/2023)
Swashbuckling is not really my thing, and I don't know the difference between a sloop and a frigate, a weather deck, quarter deck or poop deck, but Captain Thomas Grey's adventures on the high seas had me rather captivated, after I got over the author's penchant the use of multiple subordinate clauses. Mayhap he imitates the speech of the fine gentlemen of whom he writes?
In The Montevideo Brief, third in the Thomas Grey series, as an agent in His Majesty's Secret Service, he is tasked with intercepting Spanish frigates loaded with treasure to fund an alliance between France and Spain against England. In the first, Hold Fast, he goes undercover (to avenge his wife's unfortunate death from a French shot to the bow of an English ship), and in the second book in the series, Captain Grey's Gambit, he attends a chess tournament in Frankfurt in order to assist a French defector, who, at the last minute, decides he can't leave without his daughter.
In this book, he attends Beethoven concert, plays court tennis, is captured by pirates, and runs through a bedroom, tosses a gold brick to a French prostitute, and asks her to spend it well.
The action never stops, and the chapters are short and end in a cliffhanger. (He does, once, actually, hang from a cliff.) Jack Reacher meets Rudyard Kipling? Or James Bond meets Patrick O'Brien.
J. H. Gelernter knows history, especially the Napoleonic Wars, during which all three books occur. His historical note confirms the authenticity of his characters and storyline. I learned about sailors' toasts (to the ships at sea!) and all manner gentlemanly rules of conduct. Ahoy, come aboard and sail the high seas. Grey will be headed back to Gibraltar, where he will report to an American named James Madison.