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Audiobook (abridged)5 hours
The Far Side of the World
Written by Patrick O'Brian
Narrated by Tim Pigott-Smith
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
4/5
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About this audiobook
The 10th installment in the Aubrey/Maturin series
The War of 1812 continues, and Jack Aubrey sets course for Cape Horn on a mission after his own heart: intercepting a powerful American frigate outward bound to play havoc with the British whaling trade. Stephen Maturin has fish of his own to fry in the world of secret intelligence. Disaster in various guises awaits them in the Great South Sea and in the far reaches of the pacific: typhoons, castaways, shipwrecks, murder, and criminal insanity.
The War of 1812 continues, and Jack Aubrey sets course for Cape Horn on a mission after his own heart: intercepting a powerful American frigate outward bound to play havoc with the British whaling trade. Stephen Maturin has fish of his own to fry in the world of secret intelligence. Disaster in various guises awaits them in the Great South Sea and in the far reaches of the pacific: typhoons, castaways, shipwrecks, murder, and criminal insanity.
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Author
Patrick O'Brian
Patrick O’Brian (1914-2000), born Richard Patrick Russ, was an English novelist, biographer and translator from French. His translations include Henri Charrière’s Papillon, Jean Lacouture’s biography of Charles de Gaulle and many of Simone de Beauvoir’s later works, including Les Belles Images, All Said and Done and A Very Easy Death.
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Reviews for The Far Side of the World
Rating: 4.190566129811321 out of 5 stars
4/5
530 ratings13 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Far Side of The World, Patrick O’Brian’s tenth book in his Aubrey-Maturin series, picks up shortly after the events of Treason’s Harbour, with Captain Jack Aubrey tasked to take the HMS Surprise into the whaling waters around Cape Horn to protect British whalers from the USS Norfolk, tasked by the American Navy to harry British industry in those waters. Dr. Stephen Maturin, meanwhile, longs to see the natural specimens unique to that environment, particularly those of the Galapagos Islands, though, as Jack reminds him, the promise to stop there is “subject to the requirements of the service” (pg. 216). O’Brian also uses the novel to further explore the peculiarities of life at sea, including the belief in a Jonah, the intrigues that sailors – and, in certain circumstances, their wives – get up to, and the alternating existence between predation and ease. The extensive summary of whaling recalls Melville’s Moby Dick and, in his Author’s Note, O’Brian admits to cribbing William Hickey’s description of a storm’s first aspect as he felt Hickey’s “words did not seem capable of improvement” (pg. ix).This same note is where O’Brian first explicitly acknowledged that this novel exists outside the normal flow of time – this novel being the fourth of twelve to exist in what O’Brian described as an extended 1812, with these dozen books taking place between the beginning of June 1813 and November 1813. Like his previous novels, O’Brian perfectly recreates the world of the Napoleonic War in 1812, using Aubrey’s nostalgia at the coming retirement of the Surprise to view the life aboard ship, particularly aboard this idealized ship, through rose-colored glasses and with a sentimentality that will delight his readers. This Folio Society edition reprints the original text with insets containing historical portraits and sketches to illustrate some of the scenes. This novel leant its title to Peter Weir’s 2003 adaptation of the series, which borrowed elements from multiple books, including Master and Commander, HMS Surprise, The Letter of Marque, and The Fortune of War.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Typical great Capt.Aubrey, Dr. Maturin adventure novel.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Far Side of the World
Maturin and Aubrey go to the far side of the world, around the southern tip of South America, out to the pacific, and on their way, they are castaways, and at the mercy of castrating Amazons. Why did I not find this offensive? Is it because Maturin understands why they are so angry at men? Is it because the women are such great sailors? This book has a potentially melodramatic bit of plotting having to do with a jealous husband and his wife but the lurid scenes take place off shore and out of our sight.
Yet again, Maturin and Aubrey prove their undying love for each other in manly ways that could only occur in the 19th century on the high seas. Thoroughly gripping, and enjoyable, and not without some moments of medical gore. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In which Aubrey and Maturin lead Surprise on an unexpected trip into the South Atlantic, aiming to prevent the American frigate Norfolk from harassing British whalers. Maturin with privileged intelligence on a cache of paper currency aboard a sister ship, Aubrey knows only of gold: an opportunity for another misinformation campaign as proved useful in Malta? Confronting them are both an unreliable sea and a dicey crew: the able Surprises are joined by a mutinous complement dispersed from Defender, a group of rescued whalers, and a Jonah. // Stephen's witticism regarding the only proper name for a bosun's cat: Scourge (K III). The device of a letter written to Diana, relaying events which occur offstage, only to throw it away as "all the wrong tone". O'Brian is creative in his use of the epistolary form throughout the canon.Stephen falls down an open grating onto a heap of coals while avoiding "the most pretentious cat I have ever seen", and later suffers concussion & coma during a heavy blow (yet avoids trepanning at the hand of an overly eager Mr Butcher). Chapter VIII is a set-piece confection, with Stephen pulled out the taffrail window, ensnared in his own net. He is saved only by Jack's quick thinking, swimming & navigation skill, and a prodigious amount of luck. Comic relief, yes, but also affording O'Brian a chance to discuss sailing and sea life elsewise missing from life aboard a naval vessel.Pullings joins as volunteer 1st lieutenant, still without commission and not likely to get one without such a distinction in his career. Mowett serves again: will either be commended officially for their contributions?Theme of cuckoldry continues, with Hollum's and Mrs Horner's affair intertwined with Stephen's continued distraction over Diana. Stephen has written to Diana, but in ignorance entrusts Wray with its delivery. That all will end in tears seems spelled out in the character of Mr Horner.O'Brian first avoids a melodramatic confrontation in wrecking the Norfolk, then resuscitates melodrama by stranding Surprises alongside hostile Norfolks with tensions building. The genre game is wrapped up neatly via a beautifully concise ending (typically of O'Brian, almost entirely void of detail after such a precise build-up) with the sudden arrival of the American whaler ... chased by Surprise. //O'Brian in an author's note introduces the notion of "hypothetical years" to account for the duration of what seems officially to occur all in a "repeating year" (Sulzer) of 1813. Has the War of 1812 actually ended, as Capt Palmer claims, is it a ruse, or a case of mistaken intelligence?
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Captain Aubrey of the British Royal Navy is sent to the South Seas to prevent the American frigate Norfolk from harassing English whalers. It's an excellent book all around, but there are moments of pure perfection in it. The prim parson Martin shows Maturin the letter he wants to woo his lady-love with, it's horrifyingly bad, Maturin tries to tell him so as gently as possible, and Martin completely refuses to hear it. Or at one point Maturin falls out of the cabin window while Aubrey is talking. Aubrey immediately realizes what happens and, without a moment's hesitation, dives in after him, for Maturin is so uncoordinated that he could drown in only an inch of water. Later, upon finding entering the cabin and finding both Aubrey and Maturin missing, their shipmate immediately knows that Maturin fell out of the ship and Aubrey went after him. And of course the ending is basically the best ending of all endings in the entire world. In order to secure the shipwrecked Norfolk's people, Captain Aubrey lands his gig on a small island surrounded by reefs and dangerous tides. The tides mean he can't get back to the Surprise that night, and in the morning he can't see the ship at all. The Norfolk crew assures him that the Surprise has definitely wrecked, and Aubrey is afraid they're right. At least a week goes by without sighting any ship, but then he sees an American whaler coming toward the island. Aubrey knows that if the whaler picks them up, he and his men will be imprisoned, and so he works at brutal speed to get his little gig sea-worthy. But the Norfolk's men destroy his gig at the last moment (I was so angry at this point I was practically weeping with rage), and Aubrey is without hope. The whaler is close enough to hail--and THEN! STUFF HAPPENS! VERY EXCITING STUFF!
I will note that this book contains Maturin once again refusing to help a woman have an abortion. It's a particularly bad situation because he's pretty sure that her sterile husband will kill her once he finds she's pregnant. And lo and behold, her husband does indeed kill her. Your principles sure did help, huh Maturin? If the vaunted spy-master really wanted to save lives, surely he could have come up with SOMETHING besides just letting this teenager go back to her abusive husband and waiting till he kills her. He couldn't come up with a medical lie, like she's suffering from dropsy? Or ask his "particular friend" Captain Aubrey to put the abusive husband on a treasure ship or something? gah! My frustration with him was mitigated somewhat when, later in the novel, he goes on a several minute tirade about how shitty the patriarchy is for women. But still. Maturin, get your shit together. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In this installment Jack, Stephen and the crew of the Surprise are sent to the south seas to protect British whaling interests from attack by an American frigate. The usual dangers, adventures and explorations ensue!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Typically excellent @Brian/Aubrey excellent characterisation, vivid prose, compelling page-turning plot. What more could you want?
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Read this one in Bermuda in the throes of a gale, with the wind howling, palms rustling, and the flag stretched straight out almost all day. There's something about reading an Aubrey-Maturin book within sight of the sea that just brings the words to life. Here we find our duo dispatched far into the reaches of the Pacific in search of an American warship sent to harry the English whalers. With a crack crew of sailors on the Surprise (plus a few former mutineers and lunatics thrown in for good measure), they're off to the "far side of the world," which several much-too-brief and always-cut-short stops for "botanizing" along the way.With the usual good humor, surprises and rollicking good adventure that characterizes the series, a well done book (though I confess I was a bit surprised that a few plot threads that I expected would go somewhere ended up not amounting to a whole lot).
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5The tenth book of the Aubrey/Matrin series finds the HMS Surprise rounding Cape Horn and sailing the Pacific in search of an American ship harassing whalers, the Norfolk. This book is one of the main sources for the film Master and Commander: Far Side of the World although there are some huge differences. I have to say I liked the movie better although I usually like the one I saw/read first.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Another exciting and interesting installment in the Aubrey/Maturin series. Jack earns his "Lucky Jack" epithet again in this tale. Mr. O'Brian makes it appear that the ocean is a rather smaller thing than one would think - shipwrecked sailors find their way back to the ocean and can make do with just a few tools in their quest to build boats.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Book 10 in the Jack Aubry series. By far, my favorite! Aubry and Maturin are dispatched to the western coast of South America aboard the HMS Surprise just before the ship is to be taken out of service. Many fine adventures, and they become marooned twice! Very enjoyable!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This is the 2nd M&C book I've read, after the 1st in the series. I was disappointed in some ways. As before, the writing and the characters are great, really enveloping you in the world of the early 19th-century British navy. But I was quite taken aback by some of the offensive caricatures of Polynesians and women in this book, caricatures that are due to Mr. O'Brien, not to the characters in the book. It also felt like Mr. O'Brien was stretching for drama in the plot in a not very convincing manner. (It doesn't affect my review, but just a note that the plot has almost nothing to do with the film, which is substantially better than this novel.)
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5One of the weaker books in the series - which still makes it better than much else. Not vintage O'Brian.