Om Britannia's Guile
1877: Lieutenant Nicholas Dawlish is hungry for promotion. He has chosen service on the Royal Navy's hazardous Anti-Slavery patrol off East Africa for the opportunities it brings to make his name. But a shipment of slaves has slipped through his fingers and now his reputation, and his chance of promotion, are at risk. He'll stop at nothing to save them, even if the means are illegal . . . But greater events are underway in Europe. The Russian and Ottoman Empires are drifting ever closer to a war that could draw in other great powers. And Britain cannot stand aside - a Russian victory would spell disaster for her strategic links to India. The Royal Navy is preparing for a war that might never take place. Dozens of young officers, all as qualified as Dawlish, are hoping for their own commands. He's just one of many . . . and he lacks the advantages of patronage or family influence.>Far from civilisation, dependent on a new and as yet unproven weapon, he'll face a clever and ruthless enemy in unforeseeable and appalling circumstances. Only stubborn resolution - and unlikely allies -- can bring him through. But at what price? This volume in the Dawlish Chronicles series, Britannia's Guile, is set directly ahead of the action in Britannia's Wolf. It tells how Nicholas Dawlish came to meet several people who will have a massive impact on his future career. And they may not all be as they seem . . . Why The Dawlish Chronicles Series? "I've enjoyed historical naval fiction since I was introduced to C.S. Forester's Hornblower books when I was a boy," says author Antoine Vanner. "I've never tired since of stories of action and adventure by land and by sea. The Napoleonic era has however come to dominate the war and military fiction genre but the century that followed it was one no less exciting, an added attraction being the arrival and adoption of so much new technology. I've therefore chosen the late 19th Century - a time of massive political, social, economic, scientific and technological change - as the setting for the Dawlish Chronicles. My novels have as their settings actual events of the international power-games of the period and real-life personalities usually play significant roles. Britannia's Guile is no exception.
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