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Captain Blood (Paperback)
Rafael Sabatini; Introduction by Gary Hoppenstand
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R407
R345
Discovery Miles 3 450
Save R62 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Peter Blood is a physician and an English gentleman who becomes a pirate out of a rankling sense of injustice. Barely escaping the gallows after his arrest for treating wounded rebels who were fighting the oppressive King James, Blood flees England and becomes enslaved on a Barbados plantation of buccaneers. When he escapes, no ship sailing the Spanish Main is safe from Blood and his companions. Abounding with adventure, color, romance, and strong social commentary on the evils of slavery and the dangers of intolerance, this classic adventure is a story about how oppression drives men to desperate actions, how fate plays a hand in everyone's life, and how love is ultimately the greatest power of all.
Edited with an introduction by Gary Hoppenstand.
Award-winning popular culture scholar and expert, Gary Hoppenstand,
assembles a collection of essays published over the past few
decades that examine a vast array of popular adventure fiction.
Some of the most famous novels in all of popular fiction are
featured in these essays, such as Baroness Orczy's The Scarlet
Pimpernel and Rafael Sabatini's Captain Blood. Hoppenstand examines
the cultural and literary impact of these great works of
entertainment, often presenting forgotten classics in a new light.
Informative analysis offers the interested reader of popular
fiction important insights into the adventure story of the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries in American and British
literature.
Unlike other horror fiction and fantasy writers, Clive Barker is
true to the literary heritage of the genre. Though aware of the
importance of entertainment in his writing, he embraces the
traditional formulas of horror fiction and builds upon them, all
the while alluding to the works of Dante, Poe, Mary Shelley, and
others. The complexity of Barker's writing is best evidenced in the
six volume Books of Blood . Many of these short stories are
entertaining ""hair raisers""; yet they do not revel in gratuitous
violence, instead relying on style and a masterful sense of
language to entertain. This detailed study analyses the significant
themes in Barker's writing, placing him in the British Gothic
tradition of Marlowe, Saki and others.
Considered one of the foremost humorists in England at the turn of
the century, W. W. Jacobs (1863-1943) is best known for his
masterpiece of horror, ""The Monkey's Paw."" He was the author of
thirteen volumes of short stories-all of which were commercially
successful-and eighteen of these are included together for the
first time in this gripping collection of horror fiction.This book
features Gothic narratives, stories of the macabre and supernatural
tales. But they are also infused with shrewd and sardonic humor,
for which Jacobs was justifiably famous. They demonstrate vividly
his masterful instinct for weaving terror and suspense into scenes
of ordinary everyday life. His boyhood memories of the South Devon
Wharf lend authenticity to the many stories with nautical
backgrounds or that feature seamen as protagonists.Because of its
immense popularity, ""The Monkey's Paw"" has tended to overshadow a
good deal of Jacobs' other work, and it is undoubtedly the most
readily recognized and by far the most anthologized story in the
collection. But readers will be delighted to know that Jacobs'
craftmanship is abundantly apparent in many of his other tales, as
they will discover in this new volume. Horror and mystery
aficionados will be intrigued and delighted by his range of
skillful and witty prose; and they will at last come to appreciate
a writer whose other work has been for so long ""lost"" to the
general public.
Slithering from these pages are never-before-collected tales of
suspense and wonder by the woman who invented modern-day dark
fantasy: A man goes quietly to bed aboard the doomed Lusitania and
awakens on a magical South Pacific Island just as the passenger
liner is torpedoed. In a future where women rule the world, a
sentient island becomes murderously jealous of a shipwrecked
couple. Dire consequences await a human swept into the dark,
magical world of elves. A deadly labyrinth coils around the dark
heart of a picturesque landscape garden. Within an Egyptian
sarcophagus lies the horrifying price of infidelity. Swirling
unseen around us are loathsome creatures giving form to our basest
desires and fears. A beautiful, veiled medium may hold the key to
preventing unspeakable evil from slipping through the borderlands
between life and death. On a lost island a woman pipe player and
her monstrous dancing partner bring death and terror to five
adventurers. The stories in this collection have played an
integral role in the development of modern dark fantasy, greatly
influencing such writers as H. P. Lovecraft and A. Merritt.
"Oh, I wish I were anywhere but here, anywhere out of this
redtape-ridden world of ours! "I wish I were in the planet Mars!""
Whisked away to the legendary red planet, the intrepid Lieutenant
Gullivar Jones is caught up in the adventure of a lifetime. To win
the love of a beautiful princess, he fights his way across a dying
and savage planet of desolate cities, lost races, utopian
societies, and the haunting and unforgettable River of Death. This
classic, influential tale of Mars, written in the utopian tradition
of H. G. Wells's "The Time Machine," is also considered a possible
inspiration for the immortal Barsoom of Edgar Rice Burroughs. Both
reflective and imaginative, "Gullivar of Mars" celebrates the
acuity and storytelling power of science fiction writers of the
early twentieth century and continues to influence writers and to
entertain readers today. This commemorative edition includes the
full text of the classic 1905 edition, a new introduction by
Richard A. Lupoff, an illustration by Thomas Floyd, and an
afterword by Gary Hoppenstand.
The finest tale ever written of fabled Atlantis, "The Lost
Continent" is a sweeping, fiery saga of the last days of the doomed
land. Atlantis, at the height of its power and glory, is without
equal. It has established far-flung colonies in Egypt and Central
America, and its mighty navies patrol the seas. The priests of
Atlantis channel the elemental powers of the universe, and a
powerful monarch rules from a staggeringly beautiful city of
pyramids and shining temples clustered around a sacred mountain.
Mighty Atlantis is also decaying and corrupt. Its people are
growing soft and decadent, and many live in squalor. Rebellion is
in the air, and prophecies of doom ring forth. Into this epic drama
of the end of time stride two memorable characters: the
warrior-priest Deucalion, stern, just, and loyal, and the Empress
Phorenice, brilliant, ambitious, and passionate. The old and new
Atlantis collide in a titanic showdown between Deucalion and
Phorenice, a struggle that soon affects the destiny of an entire
civilization.
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