• Ligurian Mission: The Ninth Carlisle & Holbrooke Naval Adventure

  • Carlisle and Holbrooke Naval Adventures, Book 9
  • By: Chris Durbin
  • Narrated by: David Lane Pusey
  • Length: 10 hrs and 41 mins
  • 4.3 out of 5 stars (3 ratings)

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Ligurian Mission: The Ninth Carlisle & Holbrooke Naval Adventure  By  cover art

Ligurian Mission: The Ninth Carlisle & Holbrooke Naval Adventure

By: Chris Durbin
Narrated by: David Lane Pusey
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Publisher's summary

It is the summer of 1760 and the British navy reigns supreme on the oceans of the world; only in the Mediterranean is its mastery still seriously challenged. Admiral Saunders is sent with a squadron of ships-of-the-line to remind those nations that are still neutral of the consequences of siding with the French.

Edward Carlisle’s ship Dartmouth is sent to the Ligurian Sea. His mission: to carry the British envoy to the Kingdom of Sardinia back to its capital, Turin, then to investigate the ships being built in Genoa for the French. He soon finds that the game of diplomacy is played for high stakes, and the countries bordering the Ligurian Sea are hotbeds of intrigue and treachery, where family loyalties count for little. Carlisle must contend with the arrogance of the envoy, the Angelini family’s duplicity and a vastly superior French seventy-four-gun ship whose captain is determined to bring the Genoa ships safely to Toulon.

Ligurian Mission is the ninth Carlisle and Holbrooke novel. The series follows Carlisle and his protégé Holbrooke through the Seven Years' War and into the period of turbulent relations between Britain and her American colonies prior to their bid for independence.

©2021 Chris Durbin (P)2024 Chris Durbin

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What listeners say about Ligurian Mission: The Ninth Carlisle & Holbrooke Naval Adventure

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Not Durbin’s best work

The story was ok, not the best. Many of the chapters didn’t seem to have relevance in the overall story.

Carlisle and Holbrooke have essentially become the same character with little writing distinguishing the two characters. They think the same, act the same, question decisions the same. I think the series would be better if the two were distinguishingly different characters. Holbrooke has become more of a favorite character as Carlisle seems to be lost to the author.
The narrator seems to make the book worse with his monotone story telling, especially in combat. Numerous times I found myself day dreaming during battles as the narrator fails to capture the listeners attention.
Take this review with a grain of salt as I’ve listened to all 21 of the Jack Aubrey books.

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