hog88
Your ray of sunshine
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- Sep 30, 2008
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@hog88 (and anybody else who like historical fiction) , when your were reading the O'Brian books, did you have A SEA OF WORDS? It was written by Dean King and discusses terms, places, and ships in the O'Brian books, and it works just as well for many of the other series of books by authors such as C S Forester (Hornblower series) and Douglas Reeman (aka Alexander Kent - Richard Bolitho series. Reeman may be my favorite; I've read his Bolitho series but not the more current naval books. Also if you find a genre you like, fantasticfiction.com is a great source for finding other authors. I prefer it over Goodreads (goodreads.com). O'Brian is a bit tedious to read which is why I like some other authors better - A SEA OF WORDS helps clear up a lot of stuff.
One of my favorite authors is Bernard Cornwell; his series about 9th and 10th century Britain were really good as were the singles like Agincourt, he's enough a historian that a few of his books are straight non-fiction rather than historical fiction. You might be interested in the Sharpe series about a British soldier in the Napoleonic Wars; I haven't read the series yet, but I'd expect it to be every bit as good as his other books.
I haven’t used A Sea of Words, but have had to use google a few times. I really liked the Hornblower series but the detail in the O’Brian books appeals to me a little more, I almost felt like I could Captain an old sailing ship after about the 4th book. I do liKe Cornwell, I’m 4 books into the Warrior Chronicles now.
