It is 1667 and the mighty naval war between the Dutch and the
English still rages. Sir Francis Courteney and his son Hal, in their
fighting caravel, are on patrol off Southern Africa, lying in wait for
a galleon of the Dutch East India Company returning from the Orient
laden with spices, timber and gold.
From the very first pages, Wilbur Smith spins a colourful and
exciting tale, crackling with tension and drama, that builds to a
stunning climax.
Packed with vivid descriptive passages of the open seas, and an
extraordinary cast of characters, Birds of Prey is a
masterpiece from a storyteller at the height of his powers.
About the Author
Wilbur Smith was born in Central Africa in 1933. He was educated at Michaelhouse and Rhodes University. After the successful publication of When the Lion Feeds in 1964 he became a full-time writer, and has since written 30 novels, all meticulously researched on his numerous expeditions worldwide. His books have been translated into 26 different languages.
Publishers Weekly
Swashbuckling adventures at sea and on land highlight Smith's latest (after The Seventh Scroll), a number-one bestseller in England that's likely to climb the charts here. Set along the African coast during the mid-1600s, this fierce and bloody yarn features Hal Courteney, a classic seafaring hero in the making. The young sailor has been raised under the stern tutelage of his father, Sir Francis Courteney, and the somewhat gentler guidance of his African-born mentor, Aboli. Word of a truce between England and Holland doesn't reach Sir Francis in time to prevent him from capturing a treasure-laden Dutch galleon. Falsely accused of piracy, the Corteneys soon have more enemies than they can handle, including the insatiable libertine Katinka van de Velde, who sets her sights on the Courteney charge. Hal's coming-of-age is predictably spiced with romance, sea battles, imprisonments, daring escapes and an exotic voyage from Southern Africa to the Red Sea; even buried treasure and the Holy Grail figure into the plot, as befits a tale of uncompromising good guys and their irredeemably evil enemies. Smith's depiction of the African coast, and of life aboard ship, is vivid and believable. He handles the action sequences well, opting for short, trenchant paragraphs to sustain momentum. After 27 novels, Smith knows what his readers want, and once again he delivers the goods.
Kirkus Reviews
South African writer Smith leaves the Egyptian sands of River God (1994) and The Seventh Scroll (1995) to deliver a breathlessly plotted, cliché-clogged swashbuckler of English pirates harrying Dutch traders off the Cape of Good Hope in 1667.
After helping Sir Francis Drake defeat the Spanish Armada, Sir Francis Courteney, his teenage son Hal, and their trusty African sidekick Aboli are roaming the seas aboard the Lady Edwinna as privateers—seamen licensed by King Charles II to prey on ships of the Dutch East India Company as part of England's war against the Dutch. After slipping past their scurrilous rival, Angus, Lord Cumbrae (a.k.a. the Buzzard), the Courteneys seize a Dutch trader and ransom its aristocratic passengers: the loathsomely fat Dutch colony governor Petrus Jacobus van de Velde; his sexy, sadistic wife Katrinka; and the mad, mustachioed musketeer Colonel Cornelius Schreuder, with whom Katrinka is having an affair. The governor whimpers, Katrinka seduces Hal, and Schreuder vows revenge. Meanwhile, Sam Bowles, a cowardly member of the crew, betrays the Courteneys to the Buzzard, who betrays everyone to Colonel Schreuder, who throws the Courteneys and their crew into prison. Sir Francis is tortured and executed, and Hal, Aboli, and the rest of the not-so-merry men are sold into slavery but manage to stage a dashing escape with Colonel Schreuder in hot pursuit. Everybody seeks revenge on everybody else; Hal discovers true love and loss and, in a stirring shipboard climax, faces down bad Colonel Schreuder in a sword-slashing duel to the death.
Though Smith's 27th novel brims with his characteristic love of African flora and fauna, the clunky prose, tawdry sex scenes, and trite plotting make this well-researched, fast-paced epic nearly unreadable.
Other Reviews
Praise for "Birds of Prey" "Constant excitement...[A] fast-moving tale. What could be better for the beach or backyard?"--"The Washington Post Book World"
""Birds of Prey" is a wonderful novel filled with excitement, pirates and vivid sea battles. The heroes are handsome and memorable and overcome tremendous odds to defeat unscrupulous enemies, to remain honorable and wise and always win the fair maiden in the end...In short, it is vintage Wilbur Smith."--"Times Record News" (Wichita Falls, TX)
"Smith's novel is far more than your typical pirate script ... A fascinating account ... Smith deftly evokes not only the horrific but also the beautiful, particularly the lush landscape of Africa." -- "The Washington Post Book World"
'A rousing adventure story ... Smith is a captivating storyteller. His writing is fast-paces yet richly textured. His characters are unique and intriguing ... As with Smith's previous two bestsellers, "River God "and "The Seventh Scroll," this latest epic transcends the average action-adventure yarn.' -- "The Orlando Sentinel"
"Smith knows what his readers want, and once again he delivers the goods." - "Publishers Weekly"
'Wilbur Smith carries all the powerful drama and rich emotions of a bygone time into his action packed tale of the sea. "BiIrds Of Prey" is magnificent story of adventure, he enthralled the world of readers once again.' "- The Daily Mail"
'The scope is magnificent and the epic scale breathtaking ... Wilbur Smith is one of those benchmarks against whom others are compared' - "The Times"
'A gripping tale, relentless in its flow, that evokes a more colourful age - one of passion and a majesty of spirit that is seldom illustrated with such nerve' - "Express"
""
'Meticulous research support constant excitement in a fast-moving tale' - "Washington Post"""
"Smith knows what his readers want, and once again he delivers the goods." - "Publishers Weekly"
"Colorful historical snippets amid the swash and
ISBN: 9780312963811
ISBN-10: 0312963815
Series: Courtney Family Adventures
Audience:
General
Format:
Paperback
Language:
English
Number Of Pages: 664
Published: July 1998
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Dimensions (cm): 17.2 x 10.7
x 3.0
Weight (kg): 0.304