James Fenimore Cooper : Sea Tales : The Pilot / The Red Rover (Library of America) Review

James Fenimore Cooper : Sea Tales : The Pilot / The Red Rover (Library of America)
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Instead of reading from the beginning, I started with The Red Rover first. I enjoyed it immensely; it was filled with sailors' superstitions, eery encounters with unknown ships, and many tales of the 'unexplained' occurances on sea. There were wonderful descriptions from Cooper that appealed to the senses. The Red Rover is a page-turning tale of suspense. The reader is left to ponder over the identity of the captain Red Rover and the nature of his near magical power over his men, yet Cooper gives the reader a slap in the face when we realize that it is our hero, "Wilder", who is not what he seems! The story continues and ends with more identity-revealing. I finished The Red Rover with a dazzled mind, and then turned to The Pilot. Expecting more intriguing tales of the sea, this book was a let-down in that it nearly focuses on two young lieutenants trying to kidnap their lovers from England and whisk them away, back to America. Redeeming the tale slightly is the vague pilot himself, never named, but patterned on a heroic and rather "chivalrous" John Paul Jones.

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Having invented the novel of the western frontier, Cooperwent on to invent the sea novel. "The Pilot"'s shadowy hero--modeledon John Paul Jones--leads the American Navy in dangerous raids on theEnglish coast. In "The Red Rover," a notorious pirate is chased by adisguised agent of the Royal Navy. Romance, adventure, politicalintrigue, revelations of mistaken identity--here is Cooper at hisbest: a painter of brilliant seascapes, a riveting narrator ofsuspense.

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