One
of the problems that faces the writer of Napoleonic nautical fiction is
that there are a number of times when the scene, so to speak, switches
to land. The great Nelsonic battles destroyed the power of the French
fleets at sea, and then the constricting blockades prevented their
repeat. This was certainly well and good for the nations needing to keep
the Corsican tyrant bottled up on the continent, but the author who
wants to put his or her hero forth in the proper atmosphere of
derring-do is left with refitting a few single-ship actions to be
conducted by the novel's characters instead of their actual historical
participants.
Author Julian Stockwin, whose stated goal of his
Kydd series is to get his hero from pressed man to admiral, finds
himself even more constrained as many of those single-ship actions are
not the kind that helps a rising and ambitious post-captain keep the
notice of those over him who could guide his career towards the hoisting
of his own flag. So in several of his more recent Kydd novels we've
found our hero spending quite a chunk of narrative without a hint of
powder-smoke to be found. The series' 2019 entry, To the Eastern Seas,
remedies that a little by making Sir Thomas Kydd the prime mover of the
British takeover of the Dutch East Indies, giving him a role in
transforming England's commercial empire into the political one that
would dominate most of the 19th century.
After a brief reunion
with his wife Persephone, Kydd is ordered to India as a means of
reinforcing the crown's protection of its East India Company ships.
Pirate activity is biting the bottom line and a speedy, deadly frigate
with a bold and innovative captain is needed to deter their
depredations. But once on station in India, Kydd finds that there are
political intrigues aplenty -- between royal officials and Company
leaders and even between colonial officers themselves as they try to
avoid the kind of overreach that would win them no new ground as well as
leave current possessions open to French or Dutch attack. Although Kydd
was in these waters before as a common seaman, the additional
expectations of a captain in polite society present him with unfamiliar
waters that may bring him even more hazard than the enemy.
On the one hand, Eastern Seas
doesn't spin its wheels -- Stockwin puts Kydd on the scene of several
events connected to England's interests that happened in that place and
time where his courage and cleverness help save the day. On the other
hand, Kydd seems out of character in more than a couple of places. In
one, he takes steps that he should see clearly would be threatening to
his own commanders and look like attempts to undermine their authority.
In another, his worries about the absence of letters from Persephone and
the kind of thoughts it provokes him to seem like a very artificial
problem, wrapped up neatly in an almost dismissive paragraph.
Stockwin's
writing is as strong as ever. His opening description of the return of
Admiral Collingwood's fleet superbly paints both visuals and their emotional impact. The secondary narrative of the Tyger's new first lieutenant and his growth arc as a character is as well-done as anything in the series. But Eastern Seas
lacks any real sense of weight as a sequence of events in Kydd's life
and career. And it presents a main character curiously unaware of things
he's already demonstrated at this point to be able to perceive quite
clearly, for what appears to be no reason other than, "Well, otherwise
there's nothing going on." It certainly improves on some of the more
lackluster recent series entries, but it's still a little too easy to
say, "But to what end?"
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