Being as it's Talk Like a Pirate Day, ye landlubbers out there might like to set your eyes on a couple of piratical mysteries. Steve Goble writes the Spider John mysteries, and bonny mysteries they be.
The Bloody Black
Flag: a Spider John mystery by Steve Goble
Avast landlubbers! Author Steve Goble introduces a new
detective in this first book of a new series. Spider John Rush, a former
pirate, is trying to find his way back to his wife Em and his son Little
Johnny, now age eight. Spider had served on a whaling ship and then on a pirate
ship. Now he signs on to a ship sailing to Jamaica, in hopes of making some
money, with his friend Ezra Coombs.
Ezra and Spider were on Lama, which went down in a storm. Ezra’s grandmother had been hung as a witch
and his mother also. Spider’s gram had been burned. It was a bond they shared.
The two escaped from Boston ahead of an angry mob. Ezra is accused of being the son of a witch
by a tattooed crew member named Tellam from Salem.
Ezra is found dead on deck, with a flask beside him,
murdered in cold blood by a shipmate. But which one? In this adventure on the
high seas, set in 1722. Spider uses his
skills of observation and the tools of his trade as a ship’s carpenter, to
discover the murderer. A clever twist on the amateur detective character—fans
of historical mysteries and seafaring tales will enjoy sailing with Spider John
and the crew.
The Devil’s Wind: a
Spider John mystery by Steve Goble
A second helping of pirate noir is served up by author Steve
Goble. Former pirate Spider John signs on to an honest job on the ship “Redemption,
” but shortly after the ship puts out to sea, Captain Brentwood is murdered in
his locked cabin. Spider John is joined on this ship by his ex-pirate friends,
15 year old Hob and one eyed Odin, who brags of sailing with Blackbeard,
wrestling giant squid and screwing mermaids. The crew must avoid the Royal navy
ships, who are pursuing Spider John and his friends for piracy and espionage,
and evade the ruthless pirate Ned Low, on the prowl in these waters.
There are suspects aplenty in the other crew members and
passengers: Sam Smoke, a pirate suspected of being a spy for Ned Low; Abigail,
the captain’s beautiful daughter, who has caught the interest of Nicholas
Wright, another sailor; Rufus Fox, an educated man and tinkerer; and Hadley, a
former slave.
These are not the Disney-fied pirates of the theme park, but
pirates who are scarred, filthy, and curse with a vengeance, ie “bubble headed
lobcocks.” At one point Spider John muses, “He suddenly wished he owned all his
fingers and all his teeth, and perhaps a razor and some soap.” No swashbuckling
to be found in these pages, only a cast of interesting characters, lots of
seaworthy action, and a right smart plot.