BetterEditor.net - Resources for Editors and Writers

Search Advanced Search
 Location:  Home / Reference / Action & Adventure / The Road to Samarcand: An Adventure  
Related Categories
• Action & Adventure
Genre Fiction
Literature & Fiction
Subjects
• Historical
Genre Fiction
Literature & Fiction
Subjects
• General
Criticism & Theory
History & Criticism
Literature & Fiction

The Road to Samarcand: An Adventure

The Road to Samarcand: An Adventure
Author: Patrick O'brian
Publisher: W.W. Norton & Co.
Category: Book

List Price: $14.95
Buy New: $10.17
You Save: $4.78 (32%)



Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 75585

Media: Paperback
Edition: Reprint
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 272
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.5 x 0.9

ISBN: 0393333167
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780393333169

Publication Date: December 17, 2008  (New: Last 30 Days)
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Similar Items:

  • The Catalans: A Novel
  • Testimonies
  • 21: The Final Unfinished Voyage of Jack Aubrey (Aubrey/Maturin Series)
  • The Golden Ocean
  • The Unknown Shore

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

O'Brian's richly told adventure saga, with its muscular prose, supple dialogue and engaging characters, packs a nice old-school punch." --Publishers Weekly

This story begins where Patrick O'Brian's devoted fans would want it to, with a sloop in the South China Sea barely surviving a killer typhoon. The time is the 1930s and the protagonist a teenaged American boy whose missionary parents have just died. In the company of his rough seafaring uncle and an elderly English cousin, an eminent archaeologist, Derrick sets off in search of ancient treasures in central Asia.

Along the way they encounter a charismatic Chinese bandit and a host of bad characters, including Russian agents fomenting unrest. The narrative touches on surprising subjects: astronomy, oriental philosophy, the correct identification of ancient Han bronzes, and some very local cuisine. It ends in an ice-bound valley, with the party caught between hostile Red-Hat monks and the Great Silent Ones, the Tibetan designation for the yeti.




Customer Reviews:   Read 4 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Prefigures Maturin   June 14, 2006
 20 out of 24 found this review helpful

Given O'Brian's cult status, I'm surprised not to see any reviews of this early work up. Briefly, it is a "Boy's Own" type adventure set in Central Asia. Some of the adult character were featured in some of O'Brian's early short stories. I can't prove it, but I'm inclined to think it owes something to Fritz Muhlenweg's "Big Tiger and Christian," which I read as a teenager. I guess I would have to look at the respective dates to build a solid case. The other related fact which springs to mind is that O'Brian's translated "The Horsemen", Joseph Kessel's novel set in Afghanistan, which I suppose is some kind of indication of O'Brian's ongoing interest in Central Asia. "The Horsemen" was later made into a film (1970), starring Omar Sharif. If you enjoy the "The Road to Samarcand", I am pretty sure you'd enjoy "The Horsemen" and "Big Tiger", too.
I think O'Brian was adept at reading something like "Big Tiger and Christian" for background and then being able to write something with a similar setting, which as a result of his background reading, coupled with his writing ability, conveyed great authority. There are some marvellous throw away lines which serve to deliniate the charcters, such as the brief mention of a barroom brawl in which an ear was bitten off and a lasting friendship formed. I see the character of the professor in "The Road to Samarcand" as very similar to that of Stephen Maturin, and indeed prehaps prefiguring him - vague, gentlemanly, but capable of ruthless, coldblooded action when necessary. In some ways he is the most strongly drawn charcter. The presence of the adults makes this book rather different to "Big Tiger and Christian", in which the focus is on the resourceful two boys of the title. I can't help thinking that in the hands of someone like Miyazaki Hayao, the story would make a marvelous "anime manga" along the lines of his "Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind" or "Porco Russo."



4 out of 5 stars An Ancestor to Patrick O'Brian's Great Aubrey-Maturin Series   September 1, 2007
 9 out of 10 found this review helpful

Patrick O'Brian published "The Road to Samarcand" in 1954, even before "The Golden Ocean" and "The Unknown Shore," the two "juvenile" nautical novels that in many ways were precursors of his later great series of novels featuring Captain "Lucky Jack" Aubrey and Doctor Stephen Maturin. "The Road to Samarcan," itself a novel written for a youth audience, is less clearly ancestral to the later series, but there are at least faint foreshadowings, including the Professor Ayrton, the archaeologist cousin of the teenaged central character. Ayrton is both a formidible intellectual presence as well as a source of humor (he is utterly unable to master American slang, despite his easy confidence that he can speak the jargon like a native).

Although "The Road to Samarcan" does contain nautical elements (it starts aboard the schooner "Wanderer" in the South China Sea), most of the book involves wild, somewhat improbably adventures in the wilds of western China and Tibet, with encounters with bandits and murderous monks, along with the even greater peril of nature. As might be expected in a Patrick O'Brian tale, the narrative dances through a wide array of subjects, including wildlife, Chinese history, and Tibetan culture. It all makes for a "fun" read, even if it is not up to the level of the Aubrey-Maturin books.



3 out of 5 stars Foreign Devils on the Silk Road   March 13, 2008
 7 out of 9 found this review helpful

But alas, it is really a boys' story. Though a precursor to Aubrey, including taifoons, ships, excentric scientists, adventurous overland travel in pursuit of something mysterious, it does not reach the appeal of the masterful series.
The research into the China reality of the time is not up to the standard of his later work. The characters are typical boy story cliches, the plot is rather simplistic, the diaologues are not what they would have been 20 years later. Not on the level of the short stories and novels of the same time either.
If you are an O'Brian aficionado, read it for completeness. If not yet, better start elsewhere.



4 out of 5 stars No Aubrey.   August 10, 2007
 6 out of 7 found this review helpful

Written only a short time before "Master and Commander," this book gives no hint of the series of 21 "Aubrey/Maturin" books which the "New York Times" book review editor said were probably "the best historic novels of the (20th) century."

This is not to say that the book is not well-written or interesting; while there is a portion dealing with the sea, most of the actiion takes place in the Chinese/Mongolian desert a century or so ago. The time element is somewhat confused by the introdction of a "deus ex machina" in the form of a sturdy and easy-to-fly helicopter, before a practical one existed. The reader will be rewarded with an entertaining book and a large helping of Chinese history.



4 out of 5 stars If you liked "Lost Horizon,"...   September 2, 2007
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

Judging from this book, Patrick O'Brian was a fan of James Hilton's "Lost Horizon," the classic 1930s paperback that is said to be the first US paperback bestseller.

Hilton's wistful look at life in the remote Himalayas (in a fictional village he called "Shangri-La") was written in the 1930s in the shadow of the coming war, whereas O'Brian's book, though written in 1954, is set back in that same time period. And as the journey to Samarcand unfolds, O'Brian's heroes ultimately enter a land of icy, incredibly remote mountains strangely reminiscent of Hilton's lost horizon. Readers of both books will discover still more connections and resonances between them as they get to the later portions of the Road to Samarcand.

Still, there's much more to this book to like, particularly the deadpan humor and the deepening character development of what initially seem to be stock comic figures, in classic O'Brian style.





Copyright 2008 BetterEditor.net