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Britannia's Reach: The Dawlish Chronicles November 1879 - April 1880 Kindle Edition

4.3 out of 5 stars 568 ratings

“Antoine Vanner is the Tom Clancy of historical naval fiction” – Author and Nautical Historian Joan Druett.

Britannia's Reach is the 5th novel in the Dawlish Chronicles series. It continues the story of the ambitious Royal Navy officer Nicholas Dawlish, last seen in Britannia's Wolf. It's November 1879 and on a broad river deep in the heart of South America, a flotilla of paddle steamers thrashes slowly upstream. It is laden with troops, horses and artillery, and intent on conquest and revenge. Ahead lies a commercial empire that was wrested from a British consortium in a bloody revolution. Now the investors are determined to recoup their losses and are funding a vicious war to do so. Nicholas Dawlish, on leave from the Royal Navy, is playing a leading role in the expedition. But as brutal land and river battles mark its progress upriver, and as both sides inflict and endure ever greater suffering, stalemate threatens. And Dawlish finds himself forced to make a terrible ethical choice if he is to return to Britain with some shreds of integrity remaining… Why this series? “I’ve enjoyed sea adventures since I was introduced to C.S. Forester’s Hornblower books when I was a boy,” says author Antoine Vanner, “and I’ve never tired since of stories of action and adventure. The Napoleonic era has however come to dominate the war and military genre but the century that followed it was one no less exciting, an added attraction being the arrival and adoption of so much new technology from the 1860s onward. My novels have as their backgrounds actual events of the international power-games of the period and Britannia’s Reach is no exception.”

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There are 12 books in this series.

In this series (12 books)

Product description

About the Author

Antoine Vanner has had an adventurous and varied life that prepared him well to write novels he describes as "Duty and Daring in the Heyday of the British Empire." "I have survived military coups, a guerrilla war, storms at sea and life in mangrove swamps, tropical forest, offshore oil-platforms and the boardroom," he says. "That's a good starting point for any writer." Antoine has lived and worked long-term in eight countries, has travelled widely in all continents except Antarctica and is fluent in three languages. He has a passion for nineteenth-century political and military history and has a deep understanding of what was the cutting-edge technology of the time. His knowledge of human nature and his first-hand experience of the locales – often surprising – of the most important conflicts of the period provide the impetus for his chronicling of the life of the Royal Navy officer Nicholas Dawlish. “I’m fascinated by the Victorian period,” Antoine says, “for not only was it one of colonial expansion and of Great Power rivalry that often came to the brink of war, but it was also one of unprecedented social, political, technological and scientific change. Britain’s power may have been at an apogee but it was under constant threat and would demand constant adaptation from those who aspired to shape events. Many born in the 1840s would not only play significant roles in the later decades of the century but be key players in the maelstrom that would engulf the world in 1914. The Dawlish Chronicles are set in that world of change, uncertainty and risk and they involve projection of naval power to meet complex social, political and diplomatic challenges.” Find out more on Antoine's website www.dawlishchronicles.com which covers a very wide range of historical and naval topics related to the late Victorian period. You can also follow Antoine's blog on http://dawlishchronicles.blogspot.co.uk/ Antoine also welcomes you to follow him on Twitter at @AntoineVanner

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00I9I8DWC
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Old Salt Press
  • Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ 4 Feb. 2014
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ 1st
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 761 KB
  • Simultaneous device usage ‏ : ‎ Unlimited
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 306 pages
  • Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Book 5 of 12 ‏ : ‎ The Dawlish Chronicles
  • Customer reviews:
    4.3 out of 5 stars 568 ratings

About the author

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Antoine Vanner
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Antoine Vanner found himself flattered when nautical novelist Joan Druett described him as the "The Tom Clancy of historic naval fiction".

Vanner's "Dawlish Chronicles" series of naval adventures are set in the late Victorian era when technological progress was more rapid than at any previous time in history. The plots play out against a background of growing international tension. There was little open confrontation between the great powers - Britain, France and Russia, with Germany, Japan and the United States catching up - but their rivalries were often fronted by proxies, just as between the Communist and Western blocks during the Cold War.

"I've always been fascinated by this period," Vanner says, "and I saw it as the ideal setting for a series dealing with the Age of Fighting Steam, as an alternative to the large number of novels set in the Age of Fighting Sail."

There are eightbooks in the series so far - the latest being "Britannia's Innocent" of November 2019 - and all are linked to real historic events and personages. The locales vary from Denmark, Turkey, Paraguay and the United States to Cuba, Korea, Britain, East Africa and the Sudan. The technology of the time and many real-life historical characters play significant roles, but even more so is the development of the characters of the ambitious Royal Navy officer Nicholas Dawlish and his wife Florence.

"They're real people for me," says Vanner, "and as you'll see from my website, www.dawlishchronicles.com , the major events of Dawlish's life have been identified, and the novels are steadily filling in the details. Each book can be read either as part of a sequence or as a stand-alone story."

"I find the late Victorian era, roughly 1870 to 1900, fascinating because for my baby-boomer generation," Vanner says."It's 'the day before yesterday'. It's history that you can almost touch. Our grandparents grew up in that period and you heard a lot from them about it. So much in that time was so similar to what we still have today that you feel you could live easily in it, and then you hit some aspects - especially those associated with social conventions and attitudes - that make it seem wholly alien. It was a time of change on every front - intellectual, scientific, medical, social, political and technological - and yet people seem to have accommodated to these rapid changes very well."

"A revolution occurred in naval technology," Vanner says. "The Royal Navy that went to war with Russia in 1854 was virtually unchanged from that of Nelson's time, but within five decades the World War 1 navy of Dreadnoughts, battle-cruisers, submarines, wireless, the first aircraft carriers was in place and Churchill was First Lord of the Admiralty. And individual officers didn't just live through these changes - they conceived and managed them. Nicholas Dawlish, hero of my Dawlish Chronicles series, is just such an officer and he'll use the cutting-edge technology of his time to advance his career."

To learn more about Nicholas Dawlish and his world, and to contact Antoine Vanner with your comments and queries, checkout www.dawlishchronicles.com. His weekly blog,which deals with

historical and naval topics can be accessed via dawlishchronicles.com/dawlish-blog/

Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
568 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this historical naval adventure book engaging and well-written, with detailed research evident throughout. They appreciate the believable characters, with one review highlighting Dawlish's self-disciplined nature as a naval officer. The book maintains a good pace, and one customer notes its heart-pounding action.

15 customers mention ‘Readability’15 positive0 negative

Customers find the book to be a brilliant and refreshing read, with one customer noting it's better with each new book in the series.

"At last, a good read exploring the tremendous technological advances of the late 1800s...." Read more

"...criss-cross the narrative and this makes Britannia’s Reach an engaging read. Recommended" Read more

"I`'ve enjoyed reading both books about Nicholas Dawlish...." Read more

"...protagonist Dawlish is courageous, disciplined on a personal level, and very competent at conducting necessary actions on land or sea – or on river,..." Read more

8 customers mention ‘Story quality’8 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the historical adventure story, with one review highlighting the first-rate battle descriptions and another noting the authentic sense of time and place.

"...again the characters (both good and bad) are multi-dimensional and believable, the plot unfolds at a great pace, and the battle descriptions are..." Read more

"...This is both heart-pounding adventure and a nuanced exploration of the nature of power and money." Read more

"...sail - and Mr Vanner has a real ability to create an authentic sense of time and place...." Read more

"...Fun characters and a story that bitterly flows along well...." Read more

7 customers mention ‘Character development’7 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the character development in the book, finding them believable, with one customer noting that Dawlish is an interesting hero.

"...Britannia’s Wolf provides a good introduction to Nicholas Dawish’s character and the world he lived in...." Read more

"...but with Cdr Dawlish we have another believable character...." Read more

"...many other naval officers of his day, the protagonist Dawlish is courageous, disciplined on a personal level, and very competent at conducting..." Read more

"...I loved Dawlish in this book, the character is very human and his ambition and self-doubt run alongside his courage and resourcefulness in this..." Read more

7 customers mention ‘Writing quality’7 positive0 negative

Customers praise the writing quality of the book, with one noting how the author vividly creates the narrative.

"...Antoine Vanner pulls off a clever trick with his skilled writing and makes the opposition as varied as the group who appear to be in the right...." Read more

"...The books are well written, with plenty of period detail and romp along at a good pace...." Read more

"...The writing is of a consistantly high quality covering a relatively unexplored period of naval history - late nineteenth century as steam is taking..." Read more

"...I was totally immersed in the environment that the author vividly created. Fun characters and a story that bitterly flows along well...." Read more

5 customers mention ‘Depth’5 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the depth of the book, noting its thorough research.

"...The great strength of this book is the detail and depiction of the ships, sailing conditions, weaponry, tactics, military engineering and naval..." Read more

"...details of naval technology and customs have obviously been very thoroughly researched, and it is clear from other reviewers’ comments that on a..." Read more

"Antoine Vanner once again spins an enthralling yarn based around the fascinating and relatively little known ironclad era...." Read more

"...cover little-known events of the 19th Century but the detail smacks of thorough research...." Read more

4 customers mention ‘Discipline’4 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the character's discipline, with one review noting how it excites loyalty in his crews and makes him an effective leader.

"...He has the makings of a good and effective leader, and I look forward to Antione Vanner’s next books in the Dawlish Chronicles in this period of..." Read more

"...Commander Dawlish is a skilled and self-disciplined naval officer driven by both honour and a deep desire for advancement...." Read more

"...of his day, the protagonist Dawlish is courageous, disciplined on a personal level, and very competent at conducting necessary actions on land or..." Read more

"...A flawed hero, but one who excites loyalty in his crews and empathy in the reader. I keenly await the next instalment." Read more

3 customers mention ‘Image quality’3 positive0 negative

Customers praise the book's vivid imagery, with one review noting its clear mental picture and another highlighting its detailed depiction of ships.

"...The great strength of this book is the detail and depiction of the ships, sailing conditions, weaponry, tactics, military engineering and naval..." Read more

"...Mr Vanner paints a vast, epic picture, set in South America." Read more

"I find the author's descriptive style draws a clear mental image of the places mentioned...." Read more

3 customers mention ‘Pace’3 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the pace of the book, with one noting how the plot unfolds quickly.

"...The pace of technology was relentless, with ships conceived in 1880 being overtaken and made obsolete by warships launched a few years later...." Read more

"...books are well written, with plenty of period detail and romp along at a good pace...." Read more

"...are multi-dimensional and believable, the plot unfolds at a great pace, and the battle descriptions are first-rate...." Read more

Top reviews from United Kingdom

  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 3 July 2014
    Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
    At last, a good read exploring the tremendous technological advances of the late 1800s. The pace of technology was relentless, with ships conceived in 1880 being overtaken and made obsolete by warships launched a few years later. This was an era where steam was rapidly replacing sail, with the corresponding reticence of the powers-that-be to accept new ways of doing things. Naval gunnery was making the painful transition to breech loading main armament while facing the new threats imposed by modern armour plate and the torpedo.

    Dawlish is a son of this era. He has to face the new threats, and use the new and often untried technology to combat the continuous tasks faced by the Royal Navy and other reat Powers at sea, and often on land.

    Britannia’s Wolf provides a good introduction to Nicholas Dawish’s character and the world he lived in. Britannia’s Reach then takes him to South America to fight against the new threat of armoured monitor warships using the ships and weapons that would be available to him at the time. He has the makings of a good and effective leader, and I look forward to Antione Vanner’s next books in the Dawlish Chronicles in this period of rapid change.
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 7 October 2014
    Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
    You have to hand it to Antoine Vanner – he knows his stuff!

    In this second Dawlish Chronicle, he takes us to Paraguay, South America, to accompany Commander Nicholas Dawlish RN on a dangerous mission for his patron and government. And it’s dangerous in many ways apart from the fighting action: a morally questionable goal, shifting alliances amongst the participants, a treacherous river and clever, experienced and honourable enemy.

    Commander Dawlish is a skilled and self-disciplined naval officer driven by both honour and a deep desire for advancement. He has his faults, sensitivities and doubts which make him a rounded protagonist. He is a man of his age and sometimes seems old fashioned and patronising to 21st century readers, but spot-on for a Victorian military man.

    The great strength of this book is the detail and depiction of the ships, sailing conditions, weaponry, tactics, military engineering and naval service life. I loved the balloon! If a reader wants the Tom Clancy level techno detail of the period, it’s here, and fascinating even for the non-technical reader.

    For me, the detail was occasionally too much. I would have enjoyed more developed interaction between and background about the characters, particularly the opponents. And unlike the excellent Britannia’s Wolf, there was little presence of female characters; the one female enemy tended to verge on the stereotype. Perhaps more interplay with the character of the very interesting Mrs Dawlish at the beginning, thinking more about past conversations with her or references to her part in Britannia’s Wolf could have leavened the very male-centred action.

    However, that action was exciting; on land and sea, naval, military, technological, political and commercial. Motivations and lack of them were deftly drawn. Dawlish’s own progressed nicely from a desire to conduct himself properly in carrying out a mission on behalf of his government’s commercial interests and his patron’s wishes to anguish at making an impossible moral choice.

    Antoine Vanner pulls off a clever trick with his skilled writing and makes the opposition as varied as the group who appear to be in the right. Honour, greed, intolerance, loyalty, brutality, ideology, courage and comradeship on all sides criss-cross the narrative and this makes Britannia’s Reach an engaging read.
    Recommended
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 May 2014
    Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
    I`'ve enjoyed reading both books about Nicholas Dawlish. I first read Hornblower half a century ago and have only found Richard Woodman`s books to come near to C S Forrester` s hero. (I put Patrick O`Brian in a completely different league) but with Cdr Dawlish we have another believable character. The books are well written, with plenty of period detail and romp along at a good pace. With so many awful Hornblower clones available on Kindle these books are a breath of fresh air. I look forward to the next in the series and hope that the author will be able to give us some more insights into , not only life in the Victorian navy, but also how wider society at the time viewed its sailors.

    GOOD LUCK Mr Vanner, and more steam to your piston!
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 28 December 2014
    Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
    Having read 'Britannia's Wolf' I had an idea that I would like this book ... and I was not disappointed. It was even better than I expected! Any book that includes two of my favourite types of warship - Monitors and Rendel Gunboats - is always going to get a double-plus good vote from me ... and it's location - Paraguay - is one that has interested me ever since I first read about the war between Paraguay and the Triple Alliance of Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay, and the later Chaco War between Paraguay and Bolivia. Yet again the characters (both good and bad) are multi-dimensional and believable, the plot unfolds at a great pace, and the battle descriptions are first-rate. I am looking forward to reading more of the 'Dawlish Chronicles'.
    One person found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • James Singer
    5.0 out of 5 stars to intresting to put down
    Reviewed in Canada on 11 September 2020
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    This was very interesting. It takes place 65 years after the Nopoleonic wars, and as a result the ships and weapons are of that period. A change from sea to river/lake battles. The book is full of action both land and water and certainly holds your attention. I look foreward to others in the series.
  • Charles A. Seavey
    5.0 out of 5 stars and the wonderfully named Toad
    Reviewed in the United States on 30 July 2014
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    The 19th century American general William Tecumseh Sherman famously observed that "War is hell."

    It turns out that even situations not involving war between nations can be hell, as Antoine Vanner's protagonist, Nicholas Dawlish, RN, discovers in Britannia's Reach. Dawlish, lured by possible promotion to Captain, agrees to lead an expedition far up a series of rivers in Paraguay to rescue a British firm's ranching and meat packing operation currently being held by Paraguayan rebels. The government of Paraguay provides the troops, the Royal Navy "sells" some craft nearing the end of their commission to the Hyperion Corporation, and Dawlish, as he was in Britannia's Wolf, is once more detached from the RN to lead the naval portion of the punitive expedition being mounted.

    The naval side consists of a monitor, matched by a sister ship held by the rebels, and the wonderfully named Toad, a "flat iron" gun boat sporting a 9" muzzle loader, on a retractable mount that sinks back into the ship so the weapon can be reloaded without exposing the crew. Toad's drawback, like all the flat iron gunboats, is that she is very lightly armored, unlike the monitor on the expedition.

    The trip upriver is fraught with the usual dangers involved with big rivers, particularly one being defended by a very canny rebel leader who puts Dawlish, and the rest of the expedition in more than a few tight spots. Vanner has a really good hand with the action sequences. Things can, and do, get pretty grim, and the grittiness of the combat sequences comes through very clearly.

    What becomes increasingly clear to Dawlish is that while he is being shot at, the enemy is not what one could call trained soldiers fighting for their country, but basically peasants defending their homes. After one particularly hard fought battle, won by using the enormous power of Toad's 9 inch cannon, Dawlish starts to have second thoughts about the ethics of the whole undertaking.

    Still, duty is duty, and Dawlish carries it out to what only can be described as a bitter end. Hyperion Corporation's holdings are duly reclaimed, but Dawlish, to his credit, is far from happy about it. The cost in blood, mostly shed by the local peasants who are clearly being savagely exploited by the corporation, has been very high, and with corporation rule being re-established, likely to go higher.

    As mentioned, the action sequences are outstanding. The supporting characters are a colorful group, including a former Confederate cavalry officer, who despite a fondness for drink is a capable leader of men. The workings of the Toad, and Dawlish's use of her are fascinating. Vanner, and hence Dawlish, have an excellent understanding of both the strengths, and weaknesses, of the vessel.

    I don't want to make too much of this, but the story does have echoes of Conrad's Heart of Darkness. A trip on a river through wild country, a local populace being exploited by European commercial interests, and a somewhat messianic central antagonist all resonate with Conrad's tale.

    There is doubtless much more action ahead for Nicholas Dawlish, and I hope that in future volumes he gets a less morally ambiguous situation to fight his way through. These are good reads, and I look forward to more of Vanner's work.
  • R Wheating
    5.0 out of 5 stars Highly recommend
    Reviewed in Canada on 15 August 2017
    Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
    Awesome book. This story just rolls along. Great blend of history, technical detail and character development without become bogged down in any of these. Highly recommended!
  • KindleMan
    4.0 out of 5 stars Ugly Imperialism on Display
    Reviewed in the United States on 8 June 2019
    Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
    I've enjoyed both Dawlish books, but there are a few weak points that I hope get addressed in future installments. The main problem is that Dawlish himself is far too limited as the leading character in a series like this. After two full novels, I know next to nothing about him. He has no friends or hobbies. I don't know what he likes to eat or drink. I don't have a sense of what drives his ambition. The under development of this character is limiting the overall quality of the series.

    That said, the setting of the first book in the dotage of the Ottoman Empire and this one on the edge of Britain's mercantile reach are excellent. Fascinating glimpses into relatively recent history that doesn't get much attention. The action sequences are many and detailed without dragging.

    A final pet peeve. Why must every steam engine "pant?" I know what the author means. Steam engine do make a kind of panting sound. But, they can also rumble, roar, growl, thrum etc. A little variety here please! An overall good read that is just shy of great.
  • PABLO
    5.0 out of 5 stars Could not put this book down
    Reviewed in the United States on 7 January 2025
    Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
    There was nothing that I disliked about this book. Although fiction, it mirrors a period of economic imperialism that exploited native populations of poor countries that had resources to be exploited. The imperialists taught native leaders without conscience more effective ways to exploit their fellow citizens. One only has to look at modern day Africa to see the results.

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