High Noon High Noon
Book 2 - Penhale trilogy

High Noon

The Penhale Trilogy: Book Three

    • USD 4.99
    • USD 4.99

Descripción editorial

For fans of Poldark and lovers of Cornwall everywhere, comes High Noon, Crosbie Garstin’s 1925 classic adventure novel and the second book in the Penhale trilogy.

St Lucia, 1782

Ortho Penhale, taken by press gang into the Navy, is fighting against the French at the Battle of the Saintes under Admiral Rodney. Returning home wounded to Bosula, his farm in west Cornwall, Penhale finds his world changed irrevocably. 

First published in 1925, High Noon follows the continuing adventures of Ortho Penhale as he finds love and embarks on a disastrous career as a slave ship captain. 

High Noon is the second book in the legendary Penhale trilogy and available to buy worldwide in this new edited and revised edition.

Introduction by the publisher

I’ve dedicated a huge amount of time (and pleasure) to edit and republish new editions of the books, in order to bring Crosbie Garstin to a new audience. 

After much soul-searching on whether to publish the novels in their original format or to revise them for a 21st century audience, I took the latter route and hope that I have made the right decision.

I have laid a light touch over these works in the editing process: using an early edition of the texts, I have corrected mistakes and place-names, adapted hyphenation and spellings to make it an easier read (to-day becomes today, etc.) and brought consistency to the style and format of the three novels. Finally, without changing context, I purged the books of outdated words that when written were considered normal in a country that still had its grip on an empire. The gripping drama, the romance, the language and the exploits of the Penhale family remain unchanged. 

If you love the Poldark books, you'll love Penhale!

A short profile of Crosbie Garstin

Crosbie Garstin (1887-1930) was the eldest child of Norman Garstin, an Irishman who settled in Penzance and became one of the leading lights of the Newlyn School of Art.

Crosbie Garstin’s short life was as dramatic as any. Following education in Penzance, Cheltenham and Bedford, he travelled to the United States and Canada where he worked as a horse breaker on ranches, in threshing gangs, as a sawyer in lumber camps and as a Pacific coast miner. Subsequently, he travelled to Africa where he became manager of a cattle ranch.

At the start of World War I he returned to Cornwall and enlisted as a trooper in the 1st King Edward’s Horse regiment. Commissioned in the field, he also served as an intelligence officer in Ireland following the 1916 Easter Rising before returning to the Western Front.

Whilst at the front, his poetry that had previously been published in Punch and other magazines was issued as Vagabond Verses, followed by The Mud Larks, a series of sketches from the front for Punch magazine. He then embarked on a short, but prolific literary career that included the three Ortho Penhale books — The Owls’ House, High Noon and The West Wind — as well as further novels, poetry and travel writing (The Sunshine Settlers, The Coasts of Romance, and The Dragon and the Lotus). Crosbie Garstin lived at Lamorna in west Cornwall.

His final novel, China Seas, was made into a Hollywood movie starring Clark Gable in 1935, but Garstin didn’t live to see his work on screen. Following an early morning boating accident off Salcombe, Devon in April 1930, Crosbie Garstin disappeared, presumed drowned, although no body was ever found.

GÉNERO
Ficción y literatura
PUBLICADO
2015
3 de julio
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
223
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Literary Nation
VENDEDOR
Spencer Smart
TAMAÑO
3.8
MB

Más libros de Crosbie Garstin

The Owls’ House The Owls’ House
2023
The Mud Larks The Mud Larks
2023
The Owls' House The Owls' House
2019
The Mudlarks The Mudlarks
2019
The West Wind The West Wind
2015
The Owls' House The Owls' House
2015

Otros libros de esta serie

The West Wind The West Wind
2015
The Owls' House The Owls' House
2015