At the height of the Boxer Rebellion, a troop of Royal Marines led by Captain David Blackwood fight off the suicidal attacks of fanatical Chinese to rescue foreigners seeking refuge in the Peking legations and the International Settlement at Tientsin
AKA Alexander Kent. Douglas Edward Reeman was a British author who has written many historical fiction books on the Royal Navy, mainly set during either World War II or the Napoleonic Wars.
Reeman joined the Royal Navy in 1940, at the age of 16, and served during World War II and the Korean War. He eventually rose to the rank of lieutenant. In addition to being an author, Reeman has also taught the art of navigation for yachting and served as a technical advisor for films. Douglas married author Kimberley Jordan Reeman in 1985.
Reeman's debut novel, A Prayer for the Ship was published in 1958. His pseudonym Alexander Kent was the name of a friend and naval officer who died during the Second World War. Reeman is most famous for his series of Napoleonic naval stories, whose central character is Richard Bolitho, and, later, his nephew, Adam. He also wrote a series of novels about several generations of the Blackwood family who served in the Royal Marines from the 1850s to the 1970s, and a non-fiction account of his World War II experiences, D-Day : A Personal Reminiscence (1984).
The further adventures of the Blackwood family. This time Captain David Blackwood VC and his time in China and the Boxer rebellion. All the usual stuff heroic stands by the Marines. Dangerous, upriver expedition to reunite the beautiful Countess with her husband and then an epic retreat to the sea. Then on towards Peking with their back to the wall.
Quite similar to the first in the series but never the less a good swift paced read. All gung ho stuff. 3 good stars.
I decided to read this solely based on the cover and description and I am glad I did. The novel is about Royal Marines and their actions during the Boxer Rebellion in China. It was a decent book, entertaining military fiction. I was unaware that it was part of a series of books, but I would read further entries if I come across them.
Not my normal reading material but it was okay. I suppose by definition the fighting scenes are detailed, which for me tends to slow down the pace of the story, but there were enough characters involved to make each one's development and outcome interesting enough.
I wouldn't avoid others in this series, but I won't be especially seeking them out either.
I found this book to be rather formulaic. I read the first book in the series a couple of weeks ago, so perhaps I am seeing the formula rather more clearly than I would have had I let a couple of years go by. So, it is a ripping yarn, but I could not develop any enthusiasm for it.
It seems like I have read the last two books in this series as well. I think I will let this be enough.
I have to admit, i have been a Reeman fan for over thirty years now, in Germany he is sold under the pen name Alexander Kent (which he used only for the Bolitho series in the originals). Most of his books are very similar, but there are some which really stick out among the others.
Yet another good adventure story by Douglas Reeman .This time we move on to the sons of our heroes in book one , but the story ( and sub- stories ) are still fast paced and just as gripping. Roll-on book three !
Reman’s battle descriptions made me feel as if I was there, feeling the fear, the desperation and the madness. Even to feel the pride mixed with loss for the friends who didn’t make it.
Set in about 1900, Blackwood is a descendant of the hero of Badge of Glory. Although the Boer War is raging in South Africa, Blackwood and the Marines are sent to China to quell the Boxer rebellion. There Blackwood rescues a special lady. Steam ships, steam trains and the Royal Marines: an enjoyable book, Reeman's 2nd in the Blackwood series.
This book gives you a very good taste of what everyday trench warfare was like for the British soldiers during the turn of the century Boxer Rebellion in China. It is also a bit of a romance novel as well. I might have enjoyed it a little more if the civilian side of the story had been there as a balance to the starkness of the military tale...
I read over twenty of his thirty or so Richard Bolitho series novels, written under the pen-name Alexander Kent, before they started to all seem the same, but the first in this series was pretty good so I tried this one. Seems the girls just, can't keep their hands off of all of his heroes...
Another of Reeman's military Historical Fiction. This is the 2nd in the Royal Marines Saga following the Blackwood family over a course of 75 to 100 years of military action.