by Dudley Pope
C. Non-Fiction
Harry Morgan's Way: The Biography of Sir Henry Morgan 1635-1688
‘Morgan the Pirate’ is a name long associated with all the trappings of pirate living – skull and crossbones, pieces of eight, speeding ships, almost in fact ‘with a yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum’. As legend has it, his was a life of high adventure, dastardly battles and more than a few gold coins thrown in, collected by underhand means of course. Yet if this legend is true, why did Charles II knight him at the height of his career and why was he given the exalted position of governor of Jamaica?
In this authoritative biography, Dudley Pope lays to rest this popularised image and resurrects the man behind the myth. He reveals the real Henry Morgan to have been a brave and honourable soldier and a master tactician, with a vital role to play in world history. Pope brilliantly captures the political and historical events of the seventeenth-century Caribbean, and shows how, without Morgan’s involvement, the course of Jamaica’s history would have been very different. This is a masterly, definitive biography bringing together all the thrill of pirate life at sea with the true story of a remarkable soldier and buccaneer.
Battle of the River Plate
This remains the most authoritative account of the British Naval victory at the commencement of World War II. Written from British and German official records, it recounts the sinking of the Graf Spee by scuttling just ouside Montivideo harbour. As well as providing intimate detail concerning the preceding naval battle, Dudley Pope covers the personalities, the intrigue and deceptions ashore, as well as recounting Graf Spee's earlier history. A magnificent account from a renowned naval historian.
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