Promising start for a new Victorian naval hero (BOOKSELLER)
'A rollicking tale with plenty of punches' Lancashire Evening Post
A rollicking tale with plenty of punches (LANCASHIRE EVENING POST)
'Action packed and well-researched...in the vein of Forester and O'Brian but with its own distinctive flavour. Shows great promise' Good Book Guide
Killigrew R.N. is set in a relatively untouched era - the first years of the steam warships. Lunn's easy read is notable for historical accuracy yet still manages to contain more petticoats and bloody deaths than all of Patrick O'Brian's tales (WARSHIPS)
'A fascinating new series by fresh new talent Jonathan Lunn. [Killigrew] proves himself a hero to rival any Horatio Hornblower' Bolton Evening News
Action packed and well-researched...in the vein of Forester and O'Brian but with its own distinctive flavour. Shows great promise (GOOD BOOK GUIDE)
A swashbuckling high seas adventure that matches Hornblower at his best (NORTHERN ECHO)
A hero to rival any Horatio Hornblower. Swashbuckling. You bet (BELFAST TELEGRAPH)
Forty years after its abolition, the Transatlantic slave trade is more lucrative than ever; even the new steamships of the Royal Navy are powerless to catch the swift brigs of the slavers. Only one man is ruthless enough to beat the slavers at their own game. Risking death and disgrace, Lieutenant Kitt Killigrew infiltrates the crew of a slave ship to discover the whereabouts of the biggest slave market on the coast of West Africa, owned by shadowy megalomanic Francisco Salazar. From the smoke-filled gentlemen's clubs of London to the steamy jungles of the Guinea Coast, Killigrew embarks on a journey fraught with murder and betrayal.
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