Riassunto
An Officer Of The Crown is a historical novel written in the style of an illustrated 19th century journal. David Alexander Driscol is the eighteen- year-old middle-class son of a retired regimental sergeant major of Anglo-Irish and Danish descent and presently an Ensign in the 52nd (Oxfordshire) Light Infantry, his father’s old regiment. Ensign Driscol is headed to India and on the way will meet with many high and low adventures. He encounters Lieutenant Perkins of the Royal Engineers who is forming an expedition and Driscol is the first man recruited for the expedition. Lieutenant Perkins is a consummate rake and source of wonder, embarrassment and bewilderment to the younger naïve Driscol.
Driscol is an eccentric young man, an Englishman who hates tea, alcohol, horses, dogs and Frenchmen but loves books, collects recipes, loves cats and is studying Persian and Arabic to become an explorer and not only the army officer his father wishes him to be. Driscol is in conflict with his own weaknesses. He is inflicted with disabling haemophobia and acrophobia, and struggles with society as a whole and British bureaucracy in particular. He must also hide his dislike of the dominant Anglican religion. He confronts many obstacles on his path to India where he hopes to obtain his desire of becoming an explorer and to ‘shake the pagoda tree’, to make his fortune. He also hopes to find out more about those delightful creatures called women.
The book and series is written to appeal to those outstanding and well-thinking people who have enjoyed books by the following authors:
E.M. Forester, Patrick O’Brian, George Fraser, Joseph Conrad, Jack London, Bernard Cornwell, Jules Verne, Kipling, Haggard, Doyle, Defoe, Swift, Hemmingway, Wouk, Monserrat, Burroughs, Mallinson, Turtledove, Toole (Confederacy of Dunces), and G.T. Henty; additionally science fiction authors such as Phillip Dick, De Camp, Stirling, Burroughs, Brunner and others who wrote about high adventure on other planets/places/dimensions/alternative time lines. Readers of 19th century history books and military campaigns of the Victorian era will also find An Officer of the Crown of great interest.
Spoiler alert! Details about the book:
The first volume recounts Ensign Driscol’s preparations to leave England and the first steps of his voyage to India in 1836 for a secondment with the Indian army. There he is to join an expedition to explore Independent Tartary. He meets Marguerite on the coach up to his home in Eccles, Lancashire with whom he begins a correspondence. He bids farewell to his family and close friends including his acquaintance, Karen Wainwright, with whom he has an unresolved relationship. On the way to, and in London, he has his share of misadventures and triumphs.
He takes a steamship to Gibraltar and meets with several escapades, especially a young lady of good family, Millicent, and her two sisters. He is parted from her and continues his voyage by a Maltese boat to Ceuta, Algiers and Malta, fighting off a Chilean Officer who demands a duel and a piratical attack off Algiers. This is where Driscol has his first action and is much dismayed by the loss of friends and killing a man. In Malta he conducts an outrageous prank on the Royal Navy, starting a long running feud with that service and then makes his way to Alexandria. He goes by canal boat to Cairo where Perkins takes up with a local courtesan. There, Driscol assists a Maltese friend in investigating the selling of Jewish children in the slave market of Cairo, and visits the Pyramids. The two then travel to Suez where they recruit the third member of their expedition.
In Volume II he engages the Turks and Arabs at Jeddah, reaches Bombay, joins the Indian Army, takes on a concubine and recruits for the expedition. In Volume III the expedition sets sail for Persia and Tartary. In Volume IV the expedition enters Tartary with unexpected results.
Informazioni sull?autore
Hello reader Thank you for reading this book. I would enjoy hearing from you about your experience in Driscol’s world. I grew up in Hawaii, I now write books, and design games. My various career experiences have been working in Archaeology, Libraries, Artillery, Logistics, and Human Resources. I taught as a college instructor in IT, business, leadership, and military subjects. I graduated from the University of Hawaii (BA in Anthropology and MLS in Library Science), Long Island University (MBA), and the Command and General Staff College. I have worked in Europe and the Middle East for over twenty years. I have travelled extensively, some of my favorite places are Nepal, Rapa Nui, Switzerland, France, Egypt, India, Oman, and Eccles, in the United Kingdom. There are too many other exotic and exciting places I have visited to include. Oklahoma and Kansas however do not make the list. My hobbies are reading 19th century books, fishing, traveling, 1950’s cult movies, exploring all history and archaeology (ancient to modern). I am fortunate to be married to my beloved Anne and I am the full time personal servant to a cantankerous Arab cat with definite ideas of what is proper and not proper to eat. Please contact me at: anofficerofthecrown@gmail.com A picture of myself in the middle with my editors, bullyboys and assorted soft thinking lackeys, underlings and slob-jobbers. I had to use this image as the cat just ignored me (as is her wont). Image in book
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