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Wake of the Perdido Star: A Novel | 
| Authors: Gene Hackman, Daniel Lenihan Publisher: Newmarket Press Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $24.94 (100%)
New (43) Used (110) Collectible (15) from $0.01
Rating: 32 reviews Sales Rank: 983919
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st Pages: 384 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 6.5 x 1.3
ISBN: 1557043981 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9781557043986 ASIN: 1557043981
Publication Date: November 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description A world-renowned actor and an eminent underwater archaeologist have combined their remarkable talent and experience to write an amazing first novel--a rousing adventure of men and the sea, full of authentic historical and nautical detail, at once a morality tale and a saga of heroism, friendship and love. Jack O'Reilly is a 17-year old New Englander who in 1805, sails with his parents on the Perdido Star to Cuba, his mother's birthplace, to claim the land she has inherited. But for Jack, the trip that began with high hopes and the excitement of a new life, becomes a descent into violence and revenge. Tragedy strikes, Jack is forced to rejoin the Star as a member of the crew, sailing through the world's most treacherous waters under a drink-crazed captain. His soul seared and his heart calloused, his obsession to gain revenge dominates his life. And so the boy Jackson O'Reilly becomes the pirate "Black Jack," the relentless scourge of any who stand in his path to retribution - until a daring rescue of two of his mates teaches him that there are other emotions than anger, other feelings than hatred and mistrust. Jack O'Reilly is a memorable central character, and he is surrounded by an equally unforgettable cast: Paul Le Maire, the aristocratic intellectual whose own misadventures bring him onto the Star and into Jack's confidence; Quince, the first mate, Jack's mentor and defender, as brave a man who ever sailed the ocean; Quen-Li, a mysterious Chinese cook, with more than culinary skills; Old Hansumbob, the ship's poet, whose simplicity belies a wisdom born in the heart; Yatoo, a native king, whose hospitality proves indispensable to the survival of the Star's shipwrecked men, and the Count De Silva, evil incarnate, a murderer's soul breathing beneath his surface charm. With this book, Hackman and Lenihan have revived a genre of adventure novels that will have wide appeal to men and women of all ages. A saga as engrossing as it is substantial, Wake of the Perdido Star marks a stunning debut for a remarkably talented new writing team.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 27 more reviews...
I loved it July 18, 2006 R. Martinez (Boise Idaho) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
After reading some other reviews,i almost didn't read the book. i'm glad i did! Don't listen to the literary snobs who find fault with every book;if you like a good story, this one has everything. Adventure, conflict, danger, complex human emotions, friendship and teamwork. i like a story that keeps me wondering what will happen next! i found this one thoroughly satisfying,and it could be a great movie.
Action Packed June 25, 2006 Uncle Joe Carson (Front Porch of the Shady Rest Hotel) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book has more action in a single chapter than most authors can put in a trilogy! The best sea saga I've ever read!
Not a bad first effort March 22, 2005 A. J. Watson (Newcastle-on-Tyne, UK) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Reminiscent of Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey/Maturin and Julian Stockwin's Kydd/Renzi in the pairing of the intellectual LeMaire with the man of action O'Reilly, it is also set in the same period, albeit American- rather than European-based. We follow half-caste Jack's progression from mild-mannered teenager to ruthless pirate on a mission to eradicate slavers and avenge his parent's death and dishonour. In a mixture of 'Swiss family Robinson' and 'Captain Blood', the Perdido Star, captained by a crazed drunkard, is wrecked on a desert island, having made heavy weather of rounding the Horn. Neighbouring islanders, salvaged materials and the ingenuity of the survivors combine to provide a comfortable semblance of home, which is rudely shattered by the appearance of a Dutch VOC ship collecting human 'cargo'. Jack is persuaded by circumstances and his friend Paul that the only way to right the wrongs of the world is to take action - and there is action aplenty in this gripping, although slightly pulpy, first novel from Hackman & Lenihan. Well-drawn characters and an intriguing plot combine to make a story to rival the best in the genre.
Reviewer from Independent Publisher Magazine June 7, 2004 2 out of 11 found this review helpful
I wonder who the professional literary critics were who gave this book such high marks. I agree with whomever wrote the review "The Lightning Never Strikes." I am a former reviewer for INDEPENDENT PUBLISHER MAGAZINE and was given the go-ahead to review Mr. Gene Hackman's first novel. Since I am also a writer who writes nonfiction books about piracy, I was definitely enthusiastic about this swashbuckling novel! But unfortunately I struggled through quicksand to the middle of the book, then called my editor and pleaded with him not to make me finish it and write a review. Since this was right after the book's publishing date, I don't remember the specific superficial scenes I slogged through. I just remember the book was filled with cardboard characters, dumb dialogue, many erroneous facts, and a stupid plot. I don't recommend that anyone waste their time with this novel. Instead, read a novel such as THE DIARY OF A SLAVE GIRL, RUBY JO that includes pirate photos and illustrations as well as nonfiction information about pirates that seems accurate.
A boy's adventure story isn't the worst thing in the world January 17, 2002 Brian C. Taylor (Tallahassee, FL USA) 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
Fair enough. It reads like a pulp action story, at times. And our hero Jack is a little to good to be true. Mighty thews and all. Brooding countenance and flashing eyes. However that doesn't make this a bad book. It makes it a pretty entertaining and action-packed book, and while Jack may be a little unbelievable, the action and story aren't unbelievable. Essentially, Jack, the 18 year old son of a gun smith, is swept off on a whirlwind adventure that takes him from the fledgling USA to Cuba to the South Pacific. In it, he encounters self-righteous Yankees, evil Cuban noblemen, bloodthirsty Pacific Islanders (savages, don't you know), bloodthirstier Dutch slavers, and British press gangs. Okay, there are a lot of cliches (and I mean a lot), but there is a lot of fun in here too. And despite the notorious and nigh-legendary phrase "the pintles were sprung from the gudgeon," there's not an overwhelming amount of sea-stuff in here. Try reading Patrick O'Brian and you'll see what I mean. This book is comparable to Wilbur Smith's "Birds of Prey." Kinda like an old Errol Flynn movie. I enjoyed this book a good bit, and would be interested in reading more from these authors.
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