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Great book on self-learning

Categorizes lists of noteworthy places by county

A must for the history buff!

Testament of a Mormon Historian

Fair treatment for the lute at last!

filled with meaningHow many times have you asked a simple question and go the answer as "42." Yep, you are a victim to this book. Many of the clichés and truisms that rival Shakespeare are creeping into our vocabulary. And attitudes - "It has been on file."
If you are the one person that somehow got through life with out reading this series or at least seeing this on TV, then you are in for a treat. Somehow this story is earmarked as sci-fi and I guess it can be in a sense and it has all the elements necessary; it delivers a powerful message to the local Zoning Board.
I will not go though the story, as that is why you are reading the book. You need to sit down for the next sentence.
This book has changed my life.


The purist edition!

A tale of two wars25 years later, ship and man are reuninted. In the interim, SARACEN had become outmoded and out dated. Chesney has been put on the beach in an economic retrenchment that saw hundreds of naval officers end their careers prematurely. Chesney had ended up in New Zealand selling farm implements until 1939 and the start of World War II, when he returned to the UK and rejoined the Royal Navy. After several assignments in the UK, Chesney was sent to the Mediterranean where he was to take command of SARACEN. By this time a ship with no real role except to do the odd jobs required in war, moving troops, cargo, fuels everything except shell the enemy far inland. The crew was demoralized and the officers were for the most part, serving their time if the were regulars until something better came along and if they were reservists, wondering what kind of navy they were in.
Chesney undertook to change the ship and crew; with mixed results. A few officers backed his efforts while senior officials wondered if Chesney was not fit to command. He proved his fitness while escorting a convoy of ships from Alexandria to Malta.
The conclusion of the book is one that is both trite and moving at the same time and is an excellent conclusion to this excellent book.
Reeman draws on his naval experience in this theater of the war and uses it quite well. His characters are all very believeable and yet not sterotypes. All his charecters, be they admiral or seaman, are believeable and play their assigned roles well.
I highly recommend this book to anyone with an interest in the Royal Navy and the campaigns it waged in the Mediterranean in the 20th Century.


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