| Mutiny, the fourth book in the acclaimed
Thomas Kydd series, opens in 1797 as Kydd, now a master’s
mate, sails to the fabled Rock of Gibraltar – the uttermost
end of Europe, the finality of a continent. There, in an attempt
to win the heart of a lady, he volunteers to join a dangerous mission
to Venice to rescue a diplomat fleeing over the Alps in the wake
of Buonaparte’s victories. With his enigmatic, high-born friend,
Nicholas Renzi, Kydd experiences the tumultuous, heady last days
of the Venetian republic.
Back in Gibraltar, Kydd sets sail for England, desperately longed-for
after many years’ absence, and becomes centrally involved
in one of the most extraordinary events in English history –
the Mutiny at the Nore. Ten thousand men, one thousand guns and
scores of ships hold the country to ransom, the government is near
collapse, the economy on the brink of ruin.
The insurrection fails – but the Dutch Fleet at Texel now
threatens the very survival of England; should they prevail the
country will be lost to the French in hours. In the bloody Battle
of Camperdown that ensues, Kydd and Renzi experience all the horror
of a major Fleet action, but emerge victorious.
The book is based on dramatic true events that have seldom been
written about before.
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