Fiction

3 Best Pirate Adventures

January 28, 2012

Pirate Book Review

Lots of delicious pirate cupcakes

Traditional pirate adventures might involve finding a buried treasure or instigating a mutiny or trying to discover the cure for scurvy.

Or so history would lead us to believe.

But the truth is, real pirates had far greater, dare I saw more awkward, adventures.

1. Pirates Discovering a Mermaid

While most pirates pretended to be in the pirate game for the money, it’s well known (source pending) that they all truly became pirates in hopes of one day meeting a mermaid.

(Manatees need not apply.)

This is also a useful thing to know when dueling with a pirate, given that shouting, “hey, look at that rather attractive mermaid sunning herself behind you!” is always guaranteed to have the pirate turning around.

This will give you just enough time to jump overboard and swim to safety.

(Before employing such a maneuver, please first verify you know how to swim.)

(Or have a handy supply of floaties.)

Awkward Pirate Recommended Reading

A single delicious pirate cupcake

2. Pirates Staging an On-Ship Production of The Pirates of Penzance

Deep within every pirate, there is an actor.

And deep within every actor, there is a love of Gilbert and Sullivan.

And deep within every Gilbert and Sullivan lover, there is an adoration of tenderhearted pirates.

And thus the circle continues.

Until the play is interrupted by cannon-fire from your pirate archenemy.

Then there’ll be an extended intermission.

Which can be quite a relief, ’cause comic operas can last quite a bit.

Awkward Pirate Recommended Reading

Delicious pirate cupcake, the aftermath

3. Pirates Finding a Laminated Copy of the Odyssey

Within buried treasure there’s a hierarchy of booty.

For example, everyone wants to find a crown.

‘Cause crowns are cool.

But nobody wants to find a scepter.

‘Cause scepters seem cool at first.

But after a good twenty minutes, you’ve run out of people to beat and places to pound them in emphasis.

Yet the greatest buried treasure find is a laminated copy of Homer’s The Odyssey.

Pirates can easily relate to Odysseus’ trials and tribulations and really need a good story to get into during those non-windy lulls.

The lamination requirement has arisen ever since it became pirate tradition to throw grog on any pirate found reading.

  Awkward Pirate Book Review

This list was provided as enticement to read The Pirates! in an Adventure with Napoleon by Gideon Defoe.

I mainly purchased the book because of the author’s description on the back flap, but I finally got around to reading it this weekend and I truly can’t express how hilarious it is.

But I shall try, through quoting a giant squid suicide note.

To whom it may concern,

I cannot go on any longer. I know people think us giant squids are just unfathomable monsters of the deep, but we have feelings too. And it is time the world learned the terrible truth. For several years now the Pirate Captain and I have been carrying on an illicit affair. Many times I have asked the Pirate Captain to do right by me, but he refuses, always telling me that he cannot be seen having a relationship with a giant squid because of the harm it would do to his public image. Also, sometimes he hits me. Anyhow, just yesterday I discovered I was pregnant with the Pirate Captain’s secret love child! I told the Pirate Captain about this and he flew into a rage and said he would never help support his half-squid/half-pirate progeny and then he hit me some more. So now I am going to commit suicide by beaching myself. 

Goodbye, cruel world

The Giant Squid

Awkward Pirate Recommended Reading

Arrgh,

Megan

26 Goals - Read 26 Books

I, having recently lost my sanity, have decided to accomplish a series of “26 Goals” before my birthday on 12.9.2012. One of said goals is to read 26 books. Pirates! in an Adventure with Napoleon retroactively counts as the first book. ‘Cause I said so, that’s why.

3 Best Pirate Adventures

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Sea Change by Jeremy Page

From the first moment you see the cover of Jeremy Page’s Sea Change, you can tell it’s headed for tragedy. The ancient fence, holding back a wild horse with hoof up in mid-stride; the long, darkened expanse of grass meandering down to a dying willow tree; the man, seemingly adrift on a sandbar of grass in an incongruously placid river – all immediately let you know that the sunshine and lollipops you were hoping for are not set to arrive.

Maybe it’s how much time I spend orchestrating dog photo shoots. Maybe it’s how quickly fall, my favorite season, has passed. Maybe it’s the smell of Skye’s dinner (guacamole) wafting over the table as I write this post. But, lately, I’ve come to hate the tight ball of tension in my stomach as I read about an idyllic afternoon and wait for the coming catastrophe. Thankfully, my wait is short – the main character’s life is shattered just a few pages in, when a wild horse comes across a family picnic and kills his daughter.

It was shortly thereafter, while reading about his life five years hence, that I discovered I hate more the endless sorrow that follows the initial calamity. The protagonist (Guy) has moved onto a boat and tries to stave off his depression by writing a journal of his life. Only the life he portrays on the page isn’t the one he’s leading, but rather what might have been, had his daughter lived and his wife stayed by his side. And if they all decided to take a bit of a drive across America.

There’s more to the story – including a possible new love interest and a possible new daughter, who just made me feel uncomfortable inside – but nothing lifts you out of the cloud of melancholy that has becoming your reading blanket.

If you’re looking for beautifully depressing prose then you should check out Sea Change. As for me? I’m going to purchase the next lighthearted comedy I find.

‘Cause real life can be depressing enough.

But real life never provides hilarious vampire spit-takes.

Or, tragically, pet owls,

Megan

p.s. Wondering why it’s called Sea Change?

It’s taken from a song in Shakespeare’s The Tempest, which reads:

“Full fathom five thy father lies,

Of his bones are coral made:

Those are pearls that were his eyes:

Nothing of him that doth fade,

But doth suffer a sea-change

Into something rich and strange.

Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell.”

p.p.s In the same act, the same character also says “hell is empty, and all the devils are here,” and I’m eagerly awaiting that novelization.

*This post is sponsored by BlogHer. The depressing opinion is my own.*

I Hate Waiting for Death (Then, Once it Arrives, I Hate the Death)

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Spencer Quinn Dog Books Beach

I grew up with murder.

Not in the tragic, therapy-inducing way.

My family loves to read. And more than any other genre, my family loves mysteries.

Because of this early exposure, I have quite a few deep-set mystery prejudices.

One is that I don’t like pets solving crimes.

Especially cats.

Cats are dreadful detectives, and not only because they get hairballs freaking everywhere.

Yet, maybe I’ve been too quick to judge animal sleuths.

Recently, I put aside my childhood bias and read Spencer Quinn’s Bernie and Chet mysteries.

Chet is a dog. Bernie is a private detective. And over the course of two books I’ve fallen in love with both of them.

The entire series is told from Chet’s perspective, a tricky narrative that Quinn handles deftly.

He travels through circuses, ghost towns, and deserts, using his superior sense of smell and somewhat wonky memory to bring down the bad guy and protect his owner, Bernie.

Turns out, dogs might just be the best detectives of all.

Maybe I should open my mind and give Jellies a second chance,

Megan

p.s. I realize there’s actually a fourth book in the series, but it’s both new and only in hardcover, so clearly beyond my book buying parameters. Thus, let’s all just pretend it doesn’t exist, ‘mkay?

Dogs and Murder: A Surprisingly Enjoyable Duo

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