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recomended pirate books?


Barracuda Beth

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Novels:

"The Guardship," James L. Nelson

"The Blackbirder," James L. Nelson

"The Pirate Round," James L. Nelson

"The Only Life that Mattered," James L. Nelson

"On Stranger Tides," Tim Powers

"Captain Blood," Rafael Sabatini

"Flint & Silver," John Drake (a prequel to Treasure Island)

And of course, "Treasure Island," by Robert Louis Stevenson

There's also the phenomenal "Aubreyad" series of books by Patrick O'Brian. Not actually Pirate in nature, but still, amazingly well written historical novels about the Napoleonic Wars at sea. This is the series upon which the movie "Master and Commander: the Far Side of the World" is based.

And these are only the ones I've read. Here's a great resource for more, through No Quarter Given's website:

http://www.noquarter...n.net/bibl8.htm

As for non-fiction, I'll leave that to those vastly more qualified than myself.

Edited by Captain McCool

Captain Jack McCool, landlocked pirate extraordinaire, Captain of the dreaded prairie schooner Ill Repute, etc. etc.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

"That’s what a ship is, you know. It’s not just a keel, and a hull, and a deck, and sails. That’s what a ship needs. But what a ship is… what the Black Pearl really is… is freedom."

-Captain Jack Sparrow

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What are you interested in?

Modern vision of a "classic" pirate?

Classic pirate literature?

Historical fiction (historically accurate fiction)?

History books?

Each piracy-genre has it's own "must reads."

On of the best history books of recent years on the "classic" 17-teens pirates is Colin Woodward's "Republic of Pirates," which is an accurate tale of what really happened yet is quite engaging and readable for a non-historian/scholar. I'd recommend it for anyone interested in pirates, to at LEAST have a good idea of the reality that underlies and is constantly referenced in the better literature of all ages since.

For classic films, I'd recommend these 5 as "musts:"

(Heck, you'd "catch" references in Pirates of the Caribbean better once you've seen them)

- Captain Blood

- The Black Swan (my personal favorite)

- The Black Pirate (Douglas Fairbanks, b/w and silent- but the first pirate mega-hit!)

- The Crimson Pirate (a none-to-historically accurate comedy, but VERY enjoyable)

- The Sea Hawks

Those are THE biggest "classic" pirate films.

-John "Tartan Jack" Wages, of South Carolina

 

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If you read only one nonfiction book about pirates, make it Douglas Botting's The Pirates, from Time Life books. Very readable, outstanding illustrations. Some mistakes, but they all have mistakes. If you want more, then David Cordingly's Under the Black Flag should be next. It's a lot more detailed and interesting. If you're really dedicated and want to find out the nitty-gritty of pirate life, read Charles Johnson's General History of the Pirates (many libraries still have it listed under Daniel Defoe); it's challenging, but great reading. You can read it on line, in two volumes, at the Eastern North Carolina Digital Library.

For novels, Stevenson's Treasure Island has never been surpassed (not even by me, alas). Most of the other novels recommended here are good too. But for my money, Sabatini's The Sea Hawk is even better than Captain Blood.

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  • 2 years later...

Pad app http://www.bibliolab...ection-release/

Pirates and Piracy: A Historical Collection Now Available on BiblioBoard

100+ Books, Images and Articles Offered on the iPad

August 22, 2012 – The Pirates and Piracy: A Historical Collection offers books, illustrations and pamphlets full of real histories of actual pirates and thrilling tales of pirate kidnappings. For $9.99, you can own a curated universe of historical artifacts on the topic, including more than 100 books, images and articles, accompanied by expert commentary.

The Anthology is available on BiblioBoard, a free iPad® App that gives you access to dozens of historical Anthologies that explore places, events, people and themes from across the centuries.

You can:

- View all content in high resolution. You can easily zoom in to see the smallest details. On Retina display devices, it gives the illusion of holding the original artifact in your hands.

- Hunt for the hidden treasures in each historical Anthology. Our innovative visual search allows you to window-shop the content or just browse to find what interests you.

- Preview and enjoy free books and images in every Anthology. If you like what you see, purchase to get full access to the entire Anthology.

- Collaborate and share your finds with other like-minded enthusiasts.

Whether readers are interested in the real histories of actual pirates, thrilling tales of persons kidnapped by pirates or the very best fictional pirate stories, Pirates and Piracy: A Historical Collection has all the treasures they may seek. Included are many famous pirates’ flags to aid the savvy sailor or daring pirate hunter in identifying exactly which pirates he or she encounters.

Preview Pirates and Piracy: A Historical Collection absolutely free, including up to seven pages of each book. For more info, visit http://www.biblioboard.com or download on your iPad from the App Store.

$1 from every BiblioLife Anthology purchased on BiblioBoard will be donated to the Internet Archive to help in their ongoing effort to digitize and preserve the world’s history.

Sample Books Included:

- Treasure Island, by Robert Lois Stevenson

- Howard Pyle’s Book of Pirates, by Howard Pyle

- A General History of the Pyrates, by Captain Charles Johnson

- A Lady’s Captivity Among Chinese Pirates, by Fanny Loviot

- The Buccaneers of America, by John Esquemeling

- The Book of Buried Treasure, by Ralph D. Paine

Edited by Bright
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I'd recommend another pirate novel I loved - The Pirate by Sir Walter Scott.

And there is also Frederick Marryat with his books...

If you want Navy instead, then it's Hornblower series and Aubrey-Mathurin series... And Richard Dana's interesting "Two years before the Mast", and Bougainville's travels of "La Boudeuse" (including how the botanist's servant was a woman in disguise)

Edited by Elena

BTMnewad.jpg
-A swashbuckling adventures RPG, set in 1720 in West Indies; winner of Distant Fantasies& RPG-D Member's Choice Award; RPG Conference's Originality Award; 2011 & 2012 Simming Prizes-

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Two Years Before the Mast is available for free on Kindle downloads . . . lots of books that are old enough to be out of copyright are there, a lot that you see Dover (great folks!) or other houses republishing. Not to encourage not buying repubs from the good folks kind enough to do that for folks like us, but if you have one or two that you wouldn't buy anyway, but want to check out, no harm done and maybe some good gained for those of us in the trade, or, rather, "on the account" . . .

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I would second the recommendation from McCool, for fiction with a pretty decent historical flair, I really enjoyed the James L Nelson series "The Guardship", "The Blackbirder", and "The Pirate Round". Almost any of the three could be read independently as a standalone(except for maybe the last one), but they are best as a series.

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All of Nelson's books are awesome. I started with The Pirate Round and read everything of his I could get my hands on.

Hey maybe we could invite him to FTPI!! he does events ye know...

mP

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Aye... Plunder Awaits!

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