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Read Voyage Of Slaves (2006)

Voyage of Slaves (2006)

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Rating
4.12 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0399245499 (ISBN13: 9780399245497)
Language
English
Publisher
philomel

Voyage Of Slaves (2006) - Plot & Excerpts

Children's Books Too Cool For School This is yet another advance that I never got around to reading when it was new but, sadly, this one didn't come as a particularly pleasant surprise. Not that it looked like it was going to be exactly my thing, what with the boy beating on a shark with an oar on the cover and everything, but, you know, sometimes books surprise me despite their odious covers. So this is, apparently, the third book in a series called "Castaways of the Flying Dutchman." I'm going to admit right off the bat that I have not read the previous books in the series, which may have affected my opinion of this book. Although, since I didn't have any trouble understanding what had happened to Ned and Ben in the previous books, I'm afraid this one might have rehashed too much ground as well. However, that is pretty much a baseless theory. As previous books must have explained, Ben and his dog Ned served on the ship The Flying Dutchman and when the ship was cursed, they were spared the fate of the rest of the ship's evil inhabitants, but for reasons that are quite unclear to me, they were still cursed to wander the earth and live eternally. In this latest installment of their wanderings, they end up initially separated -- Ned (the dog) bumping into a traveling circus, and Ben being sold to a slave trader. They meet up again when the circus is brought to the slave trader's house to preform. Frankly, I don't feel like I can describe a great deal more without giving away too much of the plot. Perhaps it was the nature of the locations and settings, but I found this story to be rather rife with stereotypes. There were some very good and helpful Christians and Jews, and some rather bad Arabs who kept referring to the white Ben as an "infidel" and were horrified of his dog. Two of the circus members were black women, and very much treated as the exotic "other." There were several Italians, who said, "Mama Mia" and the like, and probably more I am forgetting. On the other hand, there were some rather entertaining, swashbuckling sort of moments, and the book maintained fairly good suspense throughout. The banter between Ned and Ben (oh, I forgot to mention they could speak to each other telepathically, didn't I?) was humorous enough, as well. If slightly unbelievable. However, the book left me, by and large, unsatisfied and occasionally offended. Not to mention rather feeling rather tired of its endless moral lessons. I don't have any real desire to read the previous books, nor will I snatch up the next installment, when it comes out. Might be good for boys ages 9-12 who like adventure, sword fights, piracy and the like.

I will preface this by saying that I am a sucker for Brian Jacques. I have been reading his works since he came to my school when I was ten. Twenty years later I still enjoy his tales. Voyage of Slaves has action, adventure, and romance. But overall, the plot was pretty soft. Not a lot of cerebral stimulation here. Just a good quick adventure book. If you have not read Castaways of the Flying Dutchman or An Angel's Command, which are the first two books in the series, I would suggest those first. Both of those books were essentially two stories in one book. Voyage of Slaves is just one story. A little different feel then those first books. I got the feeling reading Voyage of Slaves that we were one book away from the Castaways coming to an end. Now we may never know.

What do You think about Voyage Of Slaves (2006)?

I wish I had more positive things to say about this book.I've been a long-time fan of Jacques' Redwall series, so I picked this book up without realizing it was the third of a series. It does explain what happened previously to the characters, so I did not feel out of the loop. However, the writing was very weak.The main issue was the characters. Jacques creates colourful characters who are fun and interesting, and he excels at writing witty, lighthearted dialogue. Unfortunately, aside from that, his characterization was weak. The characters are fairly one-dimensional, and a lot of them tend to sound so similar that their dialogue is nearly interchangeable.Things come a bit too easily to Ben and Ned at times. Most of their plans go off without a hitch. They make friends quickly and easily, and are always rewarded with free meals, lodging, and even money. The fact that they see the ghosts of the Flying Ditchman ship whenever danger is near is also ridiculously convenient. Hearing about how "mysterious" Ben and his grey eyes were all the time was quite repetitive.I also need to complain about the love interest, Seaphina. The book won't shut up about the "black-skinned beauty" and how much Ben loves her, and it is painful. She has little to no personality, and I thus found her the least interesting member of the Rizzoli troupe. At the end of the book, I just could not care about her or what happened to her.A minor nitpick is Jacques' portrayal of animals in terms of intelligence is widely inconsistent. Ned the dog is witty, smart, perceptive, and he might as well be human. Dogs and cats in this novel both seem pretty intelligent, yet horses and sakes seem like just ordinary, animals who can't communicate.Lastly, the punctuation was abysmal. Whoever edited this does not know how commas or semicolons work, and it was frustrating.Overall, I was incredibly disappointed by this book. I preferred the parts where Ben and Ned were separated from the Rizzoli troupe and meeting all of these fun characters, but even then so much time was spent with Ben and Seraphina angsting over missing one another. I would highly recommend Hacques' Redwall series as opposed to this - it was not worth the time.
—Anandatic

I've always loved Brian Jacques' storytelling skills, but I kind of hate how formulaic his stories are (see the Redwall series). The man literally never deviates from his "good-is-good and evil-is-evil" characterizations, and it'd be infinitely more interesting if he was willing to blur the line a lot more. But I digress. While the first two books of this series were very imaginative (it's fun to see him tackle human characters for a change and explore Ben and Ned's 'immortal damnation;), the fact that the two protagonists are "practically perfect in every way" really irritated me. Oh, and the countless reference to Ben's "mysterious, clouded, unfathomable grey-blue eyes"? They never go away. I had a checklist with me this time and I managed to get around 11 references. So just in case the reader forgets, Ben's eyes are BLUE. Not green, brown, or orange: blue. In this book I love the complexity given to Ben's new love interest (a beautiful African girl) and the story that unfolded around them. It also didn't hurt that Ben and Ned are separated for the majority of the first half of the book and Ben gets slapped around quite a bit by his handlers (I'm kinda evil...I enjoyed that). Jacques is brilliant as usual, and I can't wait to see the next installment in this series.
—Rachel

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