Master And Commander
1969 • 350 pages

Ratings58

Average rating4

15

The first third of this book is slow and heavily bogged down by long, dry passages of O'Brian showing off his scholarly knowledge of ships. I like ships and admire the attention to authentic historical detail, but God, Pat! It's turgid stuff. You cannot and will not understand all the nautical jargon in this book, to such a degree that another dude wrote a whole other book just to help.

The quicker you can get through those early rocky waters, the better. The sprinkling of great Aubrey/Maturin character moments just about got me through, as their relationship is the star of the show from the first chapter. Their different types of naivety and dog-vs-cat contrast in personality are so entertaining and endearing. O'Brian's character work is wonderful and witty, and I also really enjoy his omniscient, bygone-era style of narration.

The book gets exponentially better as it goes on, delivering the ship-based combat, tense pursuits, bad weather, and interpersonal drama I wanted from the start. I understand that the later books in the series are less laden with dumpings of encyclopedic technical detail, so I look forward to getting into those in future. This one's a challenging but ultimately worthwhile opener.

November 24, 2023Report this review