![]() ![]() ![]() It's very obvious that the author has done a great deal of reading on the time period and other aspects of the buccanier/fliabuster way of life. However the way that all of this is imparted to us is through the characters, so for me it worked though a couple of the conversations got a little tedious but for the most that's not as whole. This author includes a great deal of phylosophy in some areas as well as other information. Though if you're looking for a light fuzzy read you might not like this. Unlike some of my previous reads I was throughly pleased with this one. ![]() However, the subject swayed me enough that I decided to go for it. ![]() Together, they explore an end to loneliness and seek to exorcise the demons of their pasts, in a wilderness torn by war and ambition.įirst of all the back of this book is rather ambigious which is why I was a little heistant towards this book. Thus he joins them and learns of the strange traditions, tactics, and customs of the Brethren of the Coast.įalling in love, he partners with Gaston, the mysterious French madman known as The Ghoul, and discouvers another noble, disenfranchiesed and scarred as himself. Once there, he finds he has much more in common with the buccaneers of Port Royal. Wherein, the Viscount of Marsdale, duelist, libertine, dilettante, and haphazard philanthropist, tralves to the colony of Jamaica to establish a sugar plantation for his estranged father. The Back of The Book: 1667 Romance in the West Indies. Title: Brethren: Raised by Wolves vol One ![]()
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