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Hoare and the Headless Captains: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare
Hoare and the Matter of Treason: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare
Hoare and the Portsmouth Atrocities: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare
Ebook series3 titles

Captain Bartholomew Hoare Series

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About this series

Perkins created a marvelous character in Bartholomew Hoare, a brilliant naval officer in King George III's navy who could not be promoted to captain of his own ship because his throat was injured in a battle and he could not make himself heard in giving commands. But his work on land impressed his superiors and, with a motley crew and a tiny ship, he is doing important work in counterespionage. Now he is living on land with his new wife and adopted daughter and trying to ferret out a traitor in the high levels of the Admiralty. A high ranking officer is murdered, and Hoare's activities endanger not only him but his wife and daughter.

With a painstaking attention to authenticity, Perkins has delighted readers of naval historical fiction. But, unfortunately for us all, he is also the late Wilder Perkins, and Hoare and the Matter of Treason is the last book of the too-short series.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 4, 2014
Hoare and the Headless Captains: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare
Hoare and the Matter of Treason: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare
Hoare and the Portsmouth Atrocities: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare

Titles in the series (3)

  • Hoare and the Portsmouth Atrocities: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare

    1

    Hoare and the Portsmouth Atrocities: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare
    Hoare and the Portsmouth Atrocities: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare

    Although Bartholomew Hoare has acquitted himself nobly on shipboard and battle, and worked his way up to lieutenant in King George III's Royal Navy, he cannot count his present life a satisfactory one. For one thing, he and his brother (as his father before him, all of them descended from Vikings) have always had to use their fists to defend their name and its implications from schoolboys, shipmates, and generally impolite Britons at every social level. That Bartholomew can handle. But a spent musket ball in the throat put a halt to a promising career at sea, and Hoare was left with a glowing recommendation and exclusively shore duties. Obviously, a captain whose orders could not be issued above a whisper could never command a ship. To Hoare, who loves the sea, it is a tragedy, as he is forced to do the land-based tasks assigned to him. His present mission is to discover what has happened to the ship that disappeared in nearby waters, and whether the strange contents of a small keg found in the sand are involved in the mystery. And it is a quest that begins Hoare's acquaintance with the extraordinary Mrs. Eleanor Graves--by his saving her from attacking ruffians, with her active and enthusiastic assistance. It is a meeting that starts a dramatic train of events. For one thing, Hoare is asked to put his talents to work on behalf of a young officer charged with the murder of his captain, a fellow of questionable probity and brutal temper. Hoare's investigation leads to evidence of criminal activity beyond the captain's murder. It's a chance for the lieutenant to further distinguish himself--if he isn't killed first. But life is not all trouble. Hoare becomes close friends with Eleanor Graves and her retired, and much older, physician husband. He meets a rather suspect visitor from abroad, and encounters assorted townspeople, both high and low--including the Graveses' dinner guest his first night in town, one Miss Jane Austen. With its strong period atmosphere, its unusual and colorful characters, and its nautical focus, Wilder Perkins's first novel, Hoare and the Portsmouth Atrocities, will entice readers who love historic naval fiction. And many others as well will be delighted to discover this author and his book, and will wait impatiently for Bartholomew Hoare's next adventure.

  • Hoare and the Headless Captains: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare

    2

    Hoare and the Headless Captains: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare
    Hoare and the Headless Captains: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare

    The second of a series of historical mysteries featuring Batholomeu Hoare, officer in His Majesty's Royal Navy during the reign of George III. Hoare is charged with finding the murderer of his Majesty's captains and uncovers an egregious conspiracy of theft and violence. Resurrected once again is the colorful Miss Jane Austen, as well as other delightful characters also featured in the first novel in this promising new series. "With its witty wordplay and attention to the nuances of British society, Perkins's droll telling of this rowdy and rollicking adventure takes a page out of Austen's work." - Publishers Weekly

  • Hoare and the Matter of Treason: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare

    3

    Hoare and the Matter of Treason: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare
    Hoare and the Matter of Treason: A Maritime Mystery Featuring Captain Bartholomew Hoare

    Perkins created a marvelous character in Bartholomew Hoare, a brilliant naval officer in King George III's navy who could not be promoted to captain of his own ship because his throat was injured in a battle and he could not make himself heard in giving commands. But his work on land impressed his superiors and, with a motley crew and a tiny ship, he is doing important work in counterespionage. Now he is living on land with his new wife and adopted daughter and trying to ferret out a traitor in the high levels of the Admiralty. A high ranking officer is murdered, and Hoare's activities endanger not only him but his wife and daughter. With a painstaking attention to authenticity, Perkins has delighted readers of naval historical fiction. But, unfortunately for us all, he is also the late Wilder Perkins, and Hoare and the Matter of Treason is the last book of the too-short series.

Author

Wilder Perkins

Wilder Perkins made his home in Easton, Maryland. He completed Hoare and the Matter of Treason shortly before his death in 1999.

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