Showing posts with label Harry Collingwood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harry Collingwood. Show all posts

Thursday, August 13, 2015

An Update to my Summer Reading List, Final

I have already started to read those tiles on my late summers reading list. I will publish the list in an upcoming post.

  1. Bohemians of the Latin Quarter, Henri Murger
  2. The Bohemians of the Latin Quarter takes place in Paris and in the 1840s. It is a story of several artistic types: a poet, painter, musician, and philosopher who meet up by chance and create a little confederation between themselves. When one prospers, they all prosper, and they live recklessly and extravagantly. Instead of sticking a little of their good fortune away for a rainy day they spend all they have until they are once again destitute. The Bohemians of the Latin Quarter tells of the artists affairs: their successes, their impoverished times, and of their mistresses.

    Although there were a few times when the story seemed to drag on, all and all the story was interesting and entertaining.

  3. Poor Jack, Frederick Marryat
  4. Poor Jack is a novel by the Frederick Marryat, and tells the story of Thomas Saunders, a sailor's son. Saunders is a neglected and mistreated by his mother and struggles to survive in Greenwich, London as a street urchin. He survives by doing odd menial jobs and begging.

    A pensioner takes the poor lad under his tutorage teaching him how to read. As the lad grows older he is recommended to an old friend of the pensioner and starts an apprenticeship to a river pilot. Thomas excels in his studies, passes his exams, and becomes a certified pilot.
    The book mentions many adventures. I have skipped a lot of the details, but the lad is very helpful to those around him and makes many friends. Let it be said the boy might have started off poor but ends up becoming very wealthy.

  5. The Arabian Nights, Muhsin Mahdi
  6. The Arabian Nights is a compilation of short stories depicting characters from the Middle East. Sinbad the Sailor might be the most notable, but there is much mention of genies, dervishes, sultans, grand vicars, princes and princesses, enchanted lands and treasures, and merchants traveling to foreign lands.

  7. The Missing Merchantman, Harry Collingwood 
  8. Ned, no sooner is promoted to 1st mate when the crew of the Flying Cloud munities. The second and captain are locked in a forward desk house and Ned is forced, by the mutineers to do navigating. The passengers, captain and second mate are abandoned on separate islands Ned does his best to provide for the cast a ways in the way of equipment and provisions.

    The pirates make for an uncharted island and set-up camp. While on a four island archipelago, Ned comes across of stash of ancient arms and a fabulous treasure. He keeps this find a secret and makes a vow to return once he has gained his freedom.

    Ned, always looking for a way to escape and possible through the use of ship finely has a chance of escaping with the ship, however narrowly. Ned sets sail to the islands where the captain and the passengers were marooned, he then heads back to island archipelago to pick-up his booty, and they all head back to Jolly Olde England.

    I have condensed my summary, however short; the story is well worth your time. I have read, as you know, quite a few of Harry Collingwood’s stories and all have been good reads.

  9. The Troll in the Garden and other Stories, Willa Cather
    A collection of short stories by Willa Cather, which depict life in Nebraska, Kansas, and Montana, for the most part. Interesting frontier characters and a few cosmopolitans thrown in for a change of pace.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Novels with Military Themes

Title Author Conflict/Year(s)
Blockaded Runners Jules Verne American Civil War
1861-1865
Under the Ensign of the Rising Sun Harry Collingwood A Story of the Russo-Japanese War
1904-1905
Forward March Kirk Munroe Spanish American War
1898
The Black Arrow-A Tale of Two Roses Robert Louis Stevenson The War of Roses
1455–1485
The Battle of Dorking George Tomkyns Chesney A fictional battle between Germany and the British purported to have been fought on British soil.
1871

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

A Treasure Map

Roger and Harry were stuck in a Spanish prison cell and knew that they were soon to be tortured in hopes that they may divulge the secret location of the treasure of Jose Leirja. The boys hoped to crack the cipher, memorize the location of the treasure, just in case they were able to make an escape, and destroy the only copy of the cipher which was held by them. They were able to crack the cipher and inscription read as follows:

Great worth of jewels, many emeralds and much gold…

Buried in deep hole under a stone. Iron ring cave.
Lonely inlet 75 degrees west by 20 degrees north.
North East end island Cuba.
Stone 14 paces, mouth 5 paces, right wall entering.

Monday, October 13, 2014

The End to the Notorious Black Pearl

"Such was the end of the Black Pearl!  She had been a floating den of vice, murder, and every conceivable form of infamy, and now her lawless and adventurous career had terminated in her becoming a target for the guns of her avengers. Her career of murder and terror and destruction was ended at last, and the evil spirit of those seas was laid...

A few seconds later her stern was seen to lift high and her bows to point downward; steeper and steeper became the angle of her decks and then, with a slow forward movement that quickly became a diving rush, she plunged to the bottom, vanishing from their sight in a whirl and froth of water."

 Across the Spanish Main, Chapter 14, Harry Collingwood

Sunday, April 27, 2014

By the Twos

I don’t know if you have noticed, but there are a lot of twos’ in this month’s posts. I didn’t plan it that way, it just sort of happened, at least at first. Once I noticed the pattern I went with it. Where it went from happenchance to the planned I will not say, but we have the following posts that came in twos’:

Jules Verne and in his Airships
Harry Collingwood and his Airships



The Proverbial Fishermen 1
The Proverbial Fishermen 2



Kriegsmarine 1/4800 Scale Miniatures Group 2
Royal Navy 1/4800 Scale Miniatures Group 1


Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Harry Collingwood and his Airships

Collingwood like Verne is an author that written about airships. Like Jules Vern’s airships Collingwood’s airships could also take to the water as a submersible.

Two of the three titles by Collingwood about airships are available as epubs:

I have read the first of these titles by Collingwood and I did make a post on this his text and also other works of Collingwood’s.

Friday, October 18, 2013

With Airship and Submarine-High Adventure

I have encountered several adventures already in this text, the first notable was the abduction of a Russian aristocrat and the forcible exchange of him for another Russian aristocrat, who happened to be innocent of the charges, imposed upon him, from a Russian prison ship; this a blatant act of piracy.

And now for another adventure, or rather a slight mishap; the professor accidently arouses a fairly large python and becomes entangled and struggles for his life. What other adventures will Collingwood conceive next?



Dr. von Schalchenberg being attacked by a 35 foot python. Image from With Airship and Submarine, Project Guntenberg, HTML version.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

The Flying Fish

The Flying Fish is a vessel mentioned in "With Airship and Submarine" by Harry Collingwood. The Flying Fish reminds me of another vessel that is similar to the Flying Fish, one written about in Jules Verne’s “The Master of the World”. Verne’s vessel is named the Terror, which might give you some idea as to the plot of this story, is similar in the Flying Fish in capabilities. Both of these vessels are convertibles and can be propelled either in the water as submarines or in the air as airships.
The Flying Fish as described in “With Airship and Submarine” is cylinder in shape, pointed at both ends and is reported as being 600 feet long and 60 feet in diameter. The Flying Fish is powered by some type of crystals and to this point in my reading these crystals have not been identified.
There aren’t any images of this vessel included within the text, so its exact likeness is unknown, but could this depiction come close to what one could imagine? I will leave that up to your imagination.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Barcelona Universal Models (BUM)

Barcelona Universal Models is a Spanish company that produces many different 1/72 scale kits. Although it seems as though they hard to find for sale I am enthralled by many of their model kit offerings.

Since I am in the middle of “Under the Ensign of the Rising Sun A Story of the Russo-Japanese War” by Harry Collingwood I was drawn to BUM’s Japanese Army 1890 – 1930 figures. My interest was also aroused by the mention their line of western structures. In order to complete a scene I am always searching for terrain pieces for my miniatures.

While performing some additional research I also found a submarine and a Italian light tank that looked irresistible. Many of these kits contain figures, vehicles, and terrain pieces.

Although the models may be hard to find for sale they look like they may be worth the search.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

The Work of William Joseph Cosens Lancaster AKA Harry Collingwood

Harry Collingwood is best known for his adventure stories many of them at sea. I have finished reading Jules Vern’s Master of the World and wanted to get back to Collingwood. Currently I am in the middle of Collingwood’s Under the Ensign of the Rising Sun, A Story of the Russo-Japanese War. Many from the following list of his works seem like titles I would like to read.

  • Across the Spanish Main
  • A Tale of the Sea in the Days of Queen Bess
  • The Adventures of Dick Maitland
  • A Tale of Unknown Africa
  • The Castaways
  • A Chinese Command
  • A Story of Adventure in Eastern Seas
  • The Congo Rovers: A Story of the Slave Squadron
  • The Cruise of the "Esmeralda"
  • The Cruise of the Nonsuch Buccaneer
  • The Cruise of the Thetis
  • A Tale of the Cuban Insurrection
  • Dick Leslie's Luck
  • A Story of Shipwreck and Adventure
  • The First Mate
  • The Story of a Strange Cruise
  • For Treasure Bound
  • Harry Escombe
  • A Tale of Adventure in Peru
  • In Search of El Dorado
  • The Log of a Privateersman
  • The Log of the Flying Fish: A Story of Aerial and Submarine Peril and Adventure
  • A Middy in Command
  • A Tale of the Slave Squadron
  • A Middy of the King: A Romance of the Old British Navy
  • A Middy of the Slave Squadron
  • A West African Story
  • The Missing Merchantman
  • Overdue
  • The Story of a Missing Ship
  • The Pirate Island
  • A Story of the South Pacific
  • A Pirate of the Caribbees
  • The Pirate Slaver
  • A Story of the West African Coast
  • The Rover's Secret
  • A Tale of the Pirate Cays and Lagoons of Cuba
  • The Secret of the Sands
  • The "Water Lily" and her Crew
  • The Strange Adventures of Eric Blackburn
  • Through Veld and Forest
  • An African Story
  • Turned Adrift
  • Two Gallant Sons of Devon
  • A Tale of the Days of Queen Bess
  • Under the Chilian Flag
  • A Tale of War between Chili and Peru
  • Under the Ensign of the Rising Sun A Story of the Russo-Japanese War
  • Under the Meteor Flag
  • Log of a Midshipman during the French Revolutionary War
  • The Voyage of the Aurora
  • With Airship and Submarine
  • A Tale of Adventure


Although I am looking forward to reading more of this author, if I ever hope to get through Verne’s Voyages Extraordinaires, I will be going back and picking another novel by Verne.

Monday, September 2, 2013

The Pirate Island, a Story of the South Pacific

I just completed my reading of Harry Collingwood’s “The Pirate Island, a Story of the South Pacific”. It is a story of high adventure in the South Pacific, a story of ship wrecks, mutiny, a fabulously rich gold mine, earthquakes and erupting volcanoes, notorious and desperate pirates, and brave and resolute seamen.

The novel is twenty chapters long and at the climax of the story, I had a hard time knowing when to quite reading and turn off the light. Harry Collingwood is pseudonym for William Joseph Cosens Lancaster, a son of a sea captain turned engineer and prolific writer of stories of the sea. Project Guntenberg offers a large set of the author’s works and in many different electronic formats.
There are several plates that depict some of the scenes presented within the text: