the Cruise of Midge
Uitgelicht
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17,80 |
Naar shop
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17,80 |
Naar shop
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17,80 |
Naar shop
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Beschrijving
Bol
The Cruise of the Midge is a spirited maritime romance set amid the perilous waters and colonial society of the early nineteenth-century Caribbean. Blending naval adventure, comic exuberance, and vivid descriptive realism, the book follows the small vessel Midge through encounters with storms, smugglers, privateers, and the theatrical manners of West Indian life. Its style belongs to the vigorous tradition of Blackwood's Magazine fiction: episodic, vernacular, satirical, and rich in nautical idiom, standing beside the sea tales of Marryat while retaining a distinctly Scottish sharpness of observation. Michael Scott, a Glasgow-born merchant and writer, drew heavily on his own experience in Jamaica and the West Indies, where commerce, empire, and seafaring danger were daily realities. Though not a professional sailor, he possessed an intimate knowledge of colonial ports, shipboard speech, and tropical atmosphere. These experiences informed both The Cruise of the Midge and its companion, Tom Cringle's Log, giving his fiction an immediacy rare among armchair naval romances. Readers who value classic sea fiction will find this book rewarding for its energy, humor, and historical texture. It is especially recommended to those interested in maritime literature, Caribbean colonial history, and the lively periodical fiction of the Romantic era.
The Cruise of the Midge is a spirited maritime romance set amid the perilous waters and colonial society of the early nineteenth-century Caribbean. Blending naval adventure, comic exuberance, and vivid descriptive realism, the book follows the small vessel Midge through encounters with storms, smugglers, privateers, and the theatrical manners of West Indian life. Its style belongs to the vigorous tradition of Blackwood's Magazine fiction: episodic, vernacular, satirical, and rich in nautical idiom, standing beside the sea tales of Marryat while retaining a distinctly Scottish sharpness of observation. Michael Scott, a Glasgow-born merchant and writer, drew heavily on his own experience in Jamaica and the West Indies, where commerce, empire, and seafaring danger were daily realities. Though not a professional sailor, he possessed an intimate knowledge of colonial ports, shipboard speech, and tropical atmosphere. These experiences informed both The Cruise of the Midge and its companion, Tom Cringle's Log, giving his fiction an immediacy rare among armchair naval romances. Readers who value classic sea fiction will find this book rewarding for its energy, humor, and historical texture. It is especially recommended to those interested in maritime literature, Caribbean colonial history, and the lively periodical fiction of the Romantic era.
AmazonPagina's: 324, Paperback, Sharp Ink
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