Newfoundland author Wakeham's tenth novel is a tale of adventure about George Langford, a man who chooses to live the life of a pirate on the high seas of the 17th century; "Many legendary and historical tales have been written and told about the swashbuckling pirates that frequented Newfoundland's bays and coves during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, but none of them are more exciting or more colorful than those of George Langford, the "Royal Imposter," who in his boyhood days, was a reckless hoodlum roaming the docks of Liverpool and living by what he could pilfer from the larders of ships he found unattended." (foreword
What do book pirates steal? Unlike buccaneers who plunder treasure from travelers, press-pirates sei...
Mark Hanna’s important book makes two very valuable contributions to the history of the British Atla...
The history Defoe wrote about in his various texts was at the same time History with a capital H, fo...
Newfoundland author Wakeham's tenth novel is a tale of adventure about George Langford, a man who ch...
This book contains four fictional tales by Newfoundland writer P. J. Wakeham; a "detective story, a...
The first of many books both written and published by Newfoundland author Wakeham, this fictional ta...
This is a fictional adventure story about a young Newfoundland boy named Dick who overhears a smuggl...
A General History of the Pyrates purports to tell the true and entirely accurate stories of ‘the mos...
While Madagascar had long been known in England as a position on the world map, it was first widely ...
In September 1717, King George I of Great Britain and Ireland issued a royal proclamation calling fo...
In modern pop-culture, the prevalence of tropes is eminent. Without a knowledge of common themes and...
In 1690, a dramatic account of piracy was published in Mexico City. The Misfortunes of Alonso Ramíre...
This is Newfoundland author Wakeham's third book of fiction, but his first collection of short stori...
During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, pirates proved to be a real threat on the high seas ...
Meet Netley Lucas, Prince of Tricksters--royal biographer, best-selling crime writer, and gentleman ...
What do book pirates steal? Unlike buccaneers who plunder treasure from travelers, press-pirates sei...
Mark Hanna’s important book makes two very valuable contributions to the history of the British Atla...
The history Defoe wrote about in his various texts was at the same time History with a capital H, fo...
Newfoundland author Wakeham's tenth novel is a tale of adventure about George Langford, a man who ch...
This book contains four fictional tales by Newfoundland writer P. J. Wakeham; a "detective story, a...
The first of many books both written and published by Newfoundland author Wakeham, this fictional ta...
This is a fictional adventure story about a young Newfoundland boy named Dick who overhears a smuggl...
A General History of the Pyrates purports to tell the true and entirely accurate stories of ‘the mos...
While Madagascar had long been known in England as a position on the world map, it was first widely ...
In September 1717, King George I of Great Britain and Ireland issued a royal proclamation calling fo...
In modern pop-culture, the prevalence of tropes is eminent. Without a knowledge of common themes and...
In 1690, a dramatic account of piracy was published in Mexico City. The Misfortunes of Alonso Ramíre...
This is Newfoundland author Wakeham's third book of fiction, but his first collection of short stori...
During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, pirates proved to be a real threat on the high seas ...
Meet Netley Lucas, Prince of Tricksters--royal biographer, best-selling crime writer, and gentleman ...
What do book pirates steal? Unlike buccaneers who plunder treasure from travelers, press-pirates sei...
Mark Hanna’s important book makes two very valuable contributions to the history of the British Atla...
The history Defoe wrote about in his various texts was at the same time History with a capital H, fo...