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   Book Info

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Sparrowhawk Book One: Jack Frake  
Author: Edward Cline
ISBN: 1931561001
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
Set in 1740s England, this enthralling first installment in a projected four-book cycle about the American Revolution introduces the main character of the series, young Jack Frake. Clever, observant and fiercely loyal, Jack gets himself noticed by Rector Robert Parmley, who decides to tutor the boy, but Jack's mother has other plans plans that lead to the murder of Parmley and Jack's running away from home. He eventually gets a job in a pub in the seaside town of Gwynnford and, after an impulsive act of bravery, he ends up in the company of the notorious Augustus Skelly and his lieutenant Redmagne leaders of a group of men who believe that the government of England is too intrusive. Cline presents these rogues as believably libertarian ancestors of the Founding Fathers. Through crisp informative dialogue, he lays the groundwork for the coming revolution by showing the mood of individualism and antigovernmentals sentiment in England 30 years before Lexington and Concord. The novel ends with Jack leaving England to serve an eight-year sentence in the colonies. Filled with period detail and characters readers will care about, the novel portrays an England of press gangs, smug nobility, oppressive government and mind-numbing poverty. Also on hand are smugglers clever enough to write utopian satires and honorable enough to live by the ideals on which government is based. Comparing favorably to the swashbuckling action of a Rafael Sabatini novel and the grueling realism of Bernard Cornwell, this is the best kind of historical fiction: a tale that reflects and illuminates its age. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Book Description
Bringing a radically new perspective to the events leading up to The American Revolution, Sparrowhawk, a new series of historical novels, establishes that The Revolution occurred in two stages: the war for independence and also a more subtle revolution that happened in men's minds that occurred many years before the Declaration of Independence. Book 1 in this new series introduces the reader to life in 18th Century England, where, despite being one of the freest countries in the world there were rumblings of discontent amongst the citizens and Jake Frake is no exception to this endemic restlessness. From an early age he has developed an independent mind and spirit, a trait that is not openly welcomed for someone of his lowly class. Fate and circumstance leads him to join a band of smugglers and he furthers their cause. Jack himself is sentenced to eight years of servitude in the Colonies and he embarks on a sea voyage aboard the Sparrowhawk, destined for Virginia.

About the Author
Edward Cline is the author of First Prize and Whisper The Guns, a suspense novel, and has written for a variety of publications including the Colonial Williamsburg Journal and Marine Corps League. His essay on John Locke was reprinted in the college textbook, Western Civilization II published by Dushkin-McGraw-Hill. While researching Sparrowhawk he lived in the Virginia Tidewater, working as a freelance writer and copyeditor. He currently lives in Las Vegas, NV.

Excerpted from Sparrowhawk Book One: Jack Frake by Edward Cline. Copyright © 2001. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
...Jack Frake was full of questions. "Why were you pretending to be someone else at the inn?" he asked. "I mean, why were you there, when Mr. Pannell was searching for you?""We were keeping an eye on him, lad. We've been looking over his shoulder so to speak, ever since he arrived in these parts months ago. He and his men have snared a few smugglers, but no one from our gang. He hasn't made a move without our knowing about it. When he left on his nocturnal patrols, I slipped out through my window in your inn and was right behind him." "How did Mr. Skelly know you were arrested?""Mr. Skelly?" chuckled Smith. "That'll tickle him. I wasn't the only Skelly man there, young Jack. When Farbrace cuffed me, word got out to Skelly, and he planned my bail. In fact, we knew the Rover was heading for Gwynnford before the town did.""Why did you let them arrest you?""It wasn't a matter of choice," answered Smith, snapping the paper. "It was a matter of by whom. I was going to be arrested; there was no arguing about that. But I knew why Admiral Harle was there-we'd got word he was on the road, looking for French agents and spies, and apprising invasion points. Now I can't speak French, but I can imitate a Scot, and you might have noticed there aren't many Scotsmen in Gywnnford. So it was a Scot he got. The Admiral was the least worst of my possible fates. If Parnell or that lieutenant got his hands on me, well, that would've been the end of my illustrious career. I'd planned to speak, but you beat me to it with your shovel.""Why did you pretend to have a dead tongue?""To avoid having to answer so many questions," replied Smith, snapping his paper again. "Eat your stew, or I will turn mute."Jack Frake spooned a few mouthfuls. "Where are all the men I heard talking?""Being paid.""You look different.""In my former life, I was an actor.""What's an actor?""An actor is someone who entertains others by being someone else. Sometimes he is paid with money; other times, with rotten fruit. He usually plies his trade in a theater." Smith relented and explained the theater to the boy, and offered to show him the make-up kit he had retrieved from his room at the Sea Siren.After a few more mouthfuls of stew, Jack Frake asked, "What may I call you?""Me? Why, Smith, of course." Smith noted the look of disappointment on his auditor's face. "It is my real name. You may consult the parish register of St John's in Wapping, if you doubt it.""May I call you Redmagne?""Even though I haven't a single lock of red hair?""Yes. I think that ought to be your real name. Methuselah Redmagne.""Methusula," said Smith. "All right. Redmagne I am." The newly named smuggler turned his attention back to the Gazetteer, now not entirely displeased with the boy's incessant curiosity."Did the Sparrowhawk go to Gwynnford?"Redmagne frowned and dropped the paper. "What do you know about that?" he asked with sharp astonishment.




Sparrowhawk Book One: Jack Frake

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Bringing a totally new perspective to the events leading up to The American Revolution, Sparrowhawk, a new series of historical novels, establishes that The Revolution occurred in two stages: the war for independence and also a more subtle revolution that happened in men's minds that occurred many years before the Declaration of Independence.
Book 1 in this new series introduces the reader to life in 18th Century England, where, despite being one of the freest countries in the world there were rumblings of discontent amongst the citizens and Jake Frake is no exception to this endemic restlessness.
From an early age he has developed an independent mind and spirit, a trait that is not openly welcomed for someone of his lowly class. Fate and circumstance leads him to join a band of smugglers and he furthers their cause until the band is eventually trapped and the leaders hanged for their crimes. Jack himself is sentenced to eight years in the Colonies and he embarques on a sea voyage aboard the Sparrowhawk, destined for Virginia.

Author Biography:Edward Cline is the author of First Prize and Whisper The Guns, a suspense novel, and has written for a variety of publications including the Colonial Williamsburg Journal and Marine Corps League. His essay on John Locke was reprinted in the book Western Civilization II published by McGraw-Hill.
While researching Sparrowhawk he lived in the Virginia Tidewater, working as a freelance writer and copyeditor. He currently lives in Las Vegas, NV.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Set in 1740s England, this enthralling first installment in a projected four-book cycle about the American Revolution introduces the main character of the series, young Jack Frake. Clever, observant and fiercely loyal, Jack gets himself noticed by Rector Robert Parmley, who decides to tutor the boy, but Jack's mother has other plans plans that lead to the murder of Parmley and Jack's running away from home. He eventually gets a job in a pub in the seaside town of Gwynnford and, after an impulsive act of bravery, he ends up in the company of the notorious Augustus Skelly and his lieutenant Redmagne leaders of a group of men who believe that the government of England is too intrusive. Cline presents these rogues as believably libertarian ancestors of the Founding Fathers. Through crisp informative dialogue, he lays the groundwork for the coming revolution by showing the mood of individualism and antigovernmentals sentiment in England 30 years before Lexington and Concord. The novel ends with Jack leaving England to serve an eight-year sentence in the colonies. Filled with period detail and characters readers will care about, the novel portrays an England of press gangs, smug nobility, oppressive government and mind-numbing poverty. Also on hand are smugglers clever enough to write utopian satires and honorable enough to live by the ideals on which government is based. Comparing favorably to the swashbuckling action of a Rafael Sabatini novel and the grueling realism of Bernard Cornwell, this is the best kind of historical fiction: a tale that reflects and illuminates its age. (Nov.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Suspense novelist Cline (Whisper the Guns, not reviewed, etc.) switches genres for a tidy, well-grounded historical, the first in a projected trilogy, about a smuggling ring in tax-smarting 18th-century England. Jack Frake, the independent-minded ten-year-old son of impoverished parents who are "locally notorious" in coastal Cornwall, figures as the hero in this coming-of-age tale. Jack's kindly mentor, an educated rector, has taken up the boy's instruction out of charity. But the rector is killed during an aborted attempt to spirit Jack into slavery. Already surging with hatred of the corruption and inequity he has seen British officials perpetuate, the boy eagerly joins a savvy smuggling operation led by Augustus Skelly, "a kind of inverse Robin Hood who robbed the Customs and excise and split the profits between himself and the poor." Cline methodically pursues two storylines that inevitably dovetail without undue suspense or excitement. Jack eludes his evil new stepfather Leith (his mother, the only female character of note, is portrayed as nothing but a drunk and a whore), while Skelly and his literary right-hand man, who goes by the alias Methuselah Redmagne, are stalked Javert-like by the wily Revenue Service official Henoch Pannell. The author's interests are clearly historical, and he inserts with academic faithfulness various lessons on English law, European succession, and geography. Literary readers will enjoy Redmagne's instruction of Jack in the development of the English novel (e.g., Swift, Defoe), but Cline's own novel suffers from stifling plotting, leaving little room for surprise or delight. The title refers to the ship that teenaged Jack boards at the close, headingfor America and (presumably) the Revolution. A solid if less than thrilling effort to render a complicated period in English history.

     



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