Sabtu, 07 Desember 2013

Winning, by David O'Neil

Winning, by David O'Neil

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Winning, by David O'Neil

Winning, by David O'Neil



Winning, by David O'Neil

PDF Ebook Winning, by David O'Neil

Dynamic sequel to Sailing Orders and Quarterdeck by UK's master of military sea adventure

The continuing saga of Captain Sir Martin Forest Bowers, RN and his loyal crew.

Captain Sir Martin Forrest-Bowers returns to the sea once again in the service of his grateful nation, along with First Lieutenant Patrick Brooks and rest of his valiant and loyal crew. Only this time, Martin finds that his wife, Lady Jennifer, is not content to sit idly at home waiting for her seafaring husband to return. Eschewing the expectations of high society, a class to which she and her husband belong, Lady Jennifer decides that she, like Ruth, whether thou goest, will sail at her husband's side and join him in battle as it may come. Finding that she is not the lone female aboard ship, Lady Jennifer learns that her Naval Captain is as brave as she had thought and that battle at his side is even more hazardous than she had imagined.

Sea action at its best

Captain Forrest-Bowers finds himself and his crew fighting the French, the Spanish, Barbary pirates, and the Americans as he and a small band of other ships sail the dangerous waters of war in service to his homeland. Then, just when needed and much to his surprise, Martin finds an unexpected ally in battle: the Americans. But can they really be trusted? One question: Friend or Foe? The correct answer means survival.

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Winning, by David O'Neil

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #94423 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-05-20
  • Released on: 2015-05-20
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Winning, by David O'Neil

About the Author Frequently compared favorably to noted author, W.E.B. Griffin, O’Neil is an avid student of military history, especially during the time of sea battles and political uprisings. A native of the United Kingdom, artist and photographer David O'Neil started writing seriously with a series of Highland guide books. His boyhood ambitions were to fly an airplane, and sail a boat. As a boy he and his family were bombed out of their home in London. He learned to fly with the Royal Air Force during his National Service. He started sailing boats while serving in the Colonial Police, in Nyasaland (Malawi). He spent 8 years there, before returning to UK. Since then he lived in southern England where he became a management consultant, for over twenty years. He returned to live in Scotland in 1980, and became a tour guide in1986. He started writing in 2006, the first guide book being published in 2007. A further two have been published since He started writing fiction in 2007 and has now written five full length novels. A student of history and formerly military, O’Neil has been compared favorably with the UK’s Ian Fleming and is frequently referred to as the “W.E.B. Griffin of the United Kingdom” due in a large part to his insightful recounting of exciting military exploits and his unique ability to develop credible characters.


Winning, by David O'Neil

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Most helpful customer reviews

5 of 6 people found the following review helpful. Winning turned out to be a loser. By Robert L. Howells Jr. For a naval novel it read like a romance novel with a nautical background. I will not read the next in this series.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Not his greatest by a long shot By California Reader Not up to his usual standard for Nauticalfiction looks like it was written in a hurry with no time to develop the characters or the plot. Just jumps from one situation to another without leading the reader on how we got from A to B

2 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Not as exciting as it could have been By Max My main complaint with O'Neill's writing is that it reads more like a bureaucratic report that a novel. Too much third person narrative and passive voice. It is like looking at a city from the gondola of a hot air ballon, rather than being on the street and experiencing the hustle-bustle, the jostling of the crowds, the horns of the impatient motorists, the aromas escaping from restaurants first hand. The ocean cruise and battle scenes are quickly and perfunctorily drawn. You do not experience that creak of the ship as it breasts the waves, the hum of the wind in the rigging, the squalor of the 'tween decks, the horror of the sick bay, the smell of the gunsmoke, roar of the cannon, or clash of the swords. It could have been great, but it was just dry, dessicated.

See all 8 customer reviews... Winning, by David O'Neil


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Winning, by David O'Neil

Winning, by David O'Neil

Winning, by David O'Neil
Winning, by David O'Neil

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