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Master and Commander
- Aubrey-Maturin Series, Book 1
- Narrated by: Ric Jerrom
- Series: Aubrey/Maturin, Book 1
- Length: 15 hrs and 49 mins
- Unabridged Audiobook
- Categories: Literature & Fiction, Action & Adventure
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Summary
Master and Commander is the first of Patrick O’Brian’s now famous Aubrey-Maturin novels, regarded by many as the greatest series of historical novels ever written. It establishes the friendship between Captain Jack Aubrey RN and Stephen Maturin, who becomes his secretive ship’s surgeon and an intelligence agent. It displays the qualities which have put O’Brian far ahead of any of his competitors: his depiction of the detail of life aboard an early 19th century man-of-war, of weapons, food, conversation and ambience, of the landscape and of the sea. O’Brian’s portrayal of each of these is faultless and the sense of period throughout is acute. His power of characterisation is above all masterly. Ric Jerrom reads this classic sea story from Patrick O’Brien.
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What listeners say about Master and Commander
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
- John
- 19-01-12
At last, unabridged and well read...it begins.
... It is not the best of his novels, (he really hits his stride a few stories down the line) but it is the right place to begin and after a slow start in Port Mahon this story gets interesting. The really great thing about O Brian's novels, apart from the detail and authentic atmosphere, is the way he manages to steer clear of the old three act hero's journey structure. There is action and heroism of course, but so much more, and his stories seem to warp and change key in unexpected ways, often wrong-footing the reader. I do hope we are going to see the rest of the series released unabridged too. (If possible read by Ric Jerrom.)
Huzzay!
65 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Michael
- 05-02-12
Unabridged at last
This is the first of a fantastic series of book. I have read them all. I must admit that the first time I read Master and commander I was not drawn straight into it. I found it to be a bit of a slow burn and O’Brian does not leave out any detail of life on board ship so there is a sea of very technical language that it is very easy to sink in. I persevered however and was soon lost in the world of the 19th century royal navy and the many adventures of Captain Jack Aubrey and his friend and Master Spy Stephen Maturin. The day I finished the last book was a sad day indeed but what a ride!
At the moment this and just one other of the books seem to be available in their unabridged form. I Have asked and beg any fans of the novel to join me in asking Audible to try and get the whole series available in the unabridged form on this side of the Atlantic where jack and Stephan would want them.
60 people found this helpful
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- Mr. T. Gettins
- 04-05-14
Jack! You have debauched my Sloth!
What made the experience of listening to Master and Commander the most enjoyable?
The Aubrey/Maturin series are classics. They are quite simply the best historical novels ever written.
They open a window into a world two hundred years gone - the world of the Royal Navy during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. This was a time of blood and thunder, of maritime siege, a war of long, patient endurance against a tenacious and powerful enemy.
The story follows the adventures of two heroes in this war: Captain 'Lucky' Jack Aubrey and the physician, naturalist, and secret agent Stephen Maturin.
And what adventures! O'Brian's books are filled with espionage, warfare and the stinking reek of gunpowder. They are also full of humanity: perverse and humorous, dear and terrible, wonderfully alive.
The narration is excellent - Ric Jerrom is a revelation. He gives a supremely able and assured performance - certainly on a par with Audible's other star narrators (for instance Rupert Degas and Toby Longworth).
Start with book one today! There is not a moment to be lost!
21 people found this helpful
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- Anne
- 12-03-12
Fantastic and unabridged
I was so pleased, when I found, that I could get this unabridged version of Master and Commander. The story is full of humor and life. Ric Jerroms narration is spot on.
I would love to be able to buy the rest of the series in an unabridged version.
19 people found this helpful
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- psiloiordinary
- 27-12-12
Which it was a relief!
As a massive fan of this justly famous and much loved series I was nervous of possible mortal injury to my own internal narrator from some badly formed and merely commercial attempt at an audiobook.
So I am pleased to confirm that it is Beautifully read with the characters voiced delightfully.
I hesitated for months before taking a chance on this. If you are a big Aubrey and Maturin fan then buy it now.
16 people found this helpful
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- Nicola
- 01-04-12
Blissful
Prodigious fine book, with dashing good narration.
I have read all the novels but enjoyed this audiobook tremendously, O'Brian creates a world in which one cannot help but be utterly immersed. The dialogue, especially that between Aubrey and Maturin, is sheer joy. More unabridged Patrick O'Brian please.
15 people found this helpful
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- William Siddall
- 05-04-12
Unabridged. At last.
Unlike another reviewer, I have been waiting for the unabridged versions of the O'Brian novels to appear on Audible ever since I joined. The whole series was available on cassette but sadly I never recorded them, and I have found the abridged versions unsatisfying.
I consider them to be the best naval historical fiction - loosely based on a real naval captain - ever written, and can only hope that more will appear in due course.
9 people found this helpful
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- Techie Mike
- 02-07-14
Excellent story very well read
Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
This book is a must for anyone interested in the sea or tales of history adventure. The attention to outstanding so much so it is hard to imagine that the book was written 170 years after the events.
Have you listened to any of Ric Jerrom’s other performances? How does this one compare?
Yes - they are all extremely well narrated, his ability to change characters seamless is brilliant he has brought this story alive!
Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
This book indeed this series warrants savouring over days or weeks. The attention to detail sometimes requires full attention which it would be hard to do in one sitting.
7 people found this helpful
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- Ian
- 22-05-12
Please listen to the crew!!!
Loved these books for years, such detail, such knowledge, such style, such a mordant wit and most of all such fabulous and detailed yarns.
I also enjoyed the film which was (loosely) based on this and a later novel "The Far Side of the World".
Comimg to the Audible version I was a little nervous: the main characters have their own voices in my imagination after all these years, but this reading did not let me down. In fact some of the more obscure nautical passages (and for the beginner these can be a tad daunting) became clearer through Mr. Jerrom's excellent reading.
The only disappointment is that I couldn't go straight on to Post Captain, because Audible have only produced one other unabridged novel in the series.
Come on Audible, we may be a smallish crew of admirers, but we are loyal to Honest Jack and we will happily follow him and the admirable Doctor for another 19 of these excellent tales.
Brilliant.
15 people found this helpful
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- einel
- 08-07-13
A
Any additional comments?
I loved the movie with jack russel (hope i wrote the name right).
When i saw there is a book of the title i had to check it.
new to buying audio books online, but this boo is very interesting and the performence is lively. very recommended.
8 people found this helpful
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- Jefferson
- 11-04-13
Looking at the Sea with Loving Relish
The first meeting between Jack Aubrey and Stephen Maturin is humorously inauspicious. At a performance by an Italian quartetto in the music-room of the Governor’s House at Port Mahon on the island of Minorca near Spain, Jack is so enthusiastically enjoying the music, beating the time with his hand and humming “pum-pum-pum,” that Stephen elbows him sharply in the ribs, so that Jack must master his desire to pick up a chair and dash it over the villain's head. Yet after receiving the wonderful news that he’s been promoted to Master and Commander of the Sophie, a small sloop, Jack is in such high spirits that when he runs into Stephen around town he invites him to a sumptuous meal, during which he invites him to become the surgeon of the Sophie. (Whereas other naval historical fiction, like the Horatio Hornblower and Alan Lewrie series, begin at the beginning of their heroes’ naval careers as midshipmen, O’Brien opens his with the promotion of Jack, who has nominally been at sea since nine and factually since twelve, to master and commander, a proto-captain.)
Jack and Stephen differ in so many ways! Jack, an officer in His Majesty’s navy, is tall, robust, tanned, good-natured, and blond-maned, while Stephen, an out-of-work civilian physician-biologist is small, slender, pale, melancholic, and be-wigged (with a weird hair-piece made of wire). Furthermore, Jack tends to speak his mind, often unintentionally offending his interlocutors, is bad at languages (as when he comically confuses “putain” with “patois”), is hot-tempered (which gets him into trouble with authority figures), while the highly educated and intelligent Stephen is more careful in his speech, more philosophical, and is fluent in Catalan and speaks Spanish and French as well. Nevertheless, the two men are roughly the same age (between twenty and thirty), share a love of music (Jack playing the violin, Stephen the cello), and are naturally drawn to one another as boon companions. One of the great pleasures of the novel is beholding their friendship unfold.
Other pleasures involve the exciting scenes of naval action that suddenly pop up, from inconclusive minor skirmishes between pairs of ships to major battles involving multiple ships and shore batteries (for in the year 1800 when the novel takes place England is at war with Spain and France), as well as the occasional brief, vivid, and lyrical descriptions of the world viewed with relish from a ship at sea:
“At almost the same time the sun popped up from behind St. Phillip’s fort; it did, in fact, pop up, flattened like a sideways lemon in the morning haze and drawing its bottom free of the land with a distinct jerk.”
Or
“The sea itself already had a nacreous light that belonged more to the day than the darkness, and this light was reflected in the great convexities of the topsails, giving them the lustre of grey pearls.”
O’Brien also writes many spicy and funny lines, as when some of the Sophie’s men comment on the middle-aged Master’s obvious feeling for Jack: “Old Sodom and Gomorrah is sweet on Goldilocks.” Or as when Stephen looks forward to working on a patient: “It has been a long time since I felt the grind of bone under my saw.” Or as when Jack tells Stephen about the poor food he’ll have to endure till the Sophie can get better supplies: “Salt horse and Old Weevil’s wedding cake for most of the voyage, with four-water grog to wet it.”
There are also poignant lines about the difficulties we face in life, as when the conflicted Lieutenant James Dillon says to his fellow-Irishman Stephen, “We understood one another better before ever I opened my mouth.” Stephen himself has a philosophical turn of mind, and is often observing and then commenting on human and animal nature, as when he tries to explain to the straightforward Jack how a man might be torn between conflicting loyalties, or as when he intently observes the macabre copulation of a praying mantis couple, during which the male mounts the female and grasps her body with his legs, only to have her bite off his head and eat it, leaving his body still copulating, which leads Stephen to tell Jack that at times a woman doesn’t need a man’s head and heart. (The depiction of women in the novel is definitely done from a male point of view!)
And of course there are plenty of nautical details in the novel, about the different ships in the age of sail, and of the different sails, masts, guns, crews, officers, punishments, techniques, procedures, protocols, strategies, food and drink, toilets, sleeping arrangements, and so on involved. Some of them remain opaque to land-lubber me, but many of them become more or less clear thanks to O’Brien’s device of inserting Stephen, a man with “no experience in naval matters,” into Jack’s world, so that he may ask questions and make comments on our behalf, so to speak, as when early in the novel he’s given a tour of the Sophie by a midshipman. Anyway, the nautical details never get in the way of the story, which is full of psychological and physical excitement, humor, relish, and suspense.
Ric Jerrom reads the novel with clarity, feeling, and wit, modifying his voice effectively for the different seamen, whether common or elite, English or foreign, old or young, drunk or sober, pleasant or nasty, and so on. He brings the book vividly to life.
Fans of the Hornblower or Lewrie books should enjoy Master and Commander, as should anyone who likes historical novels featuring compelling characters and authentic settings and exciting action.
7 people found this helpful
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- Alexandra Berndsen
- 13-06-12
Ripping yarn, wonderful characters
The Aubrey-Maturin series is one of my favourite series of historical fiction. The historical backgrounds are well-researched and accurate, the plots intriguing, the writing superb. What's more, the stories are told with some humour, and with real love for the main characters which are thouroughly human and likeable despite (or because of) their faults. And there's plenty of naval warfare action, plus some science thrown in too.
The narrator of this first book in the series is excellent, he strikes exactly the right tone of voice.
I can't wait for the whole series to become available (*unabridged*!).
5 people found this helpful
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- Michael
- 25-02-16
Now I know what I've been missing.
Good dramatization of historical events and age of sail procedures and customs. I thought the narrator did a credible job of imparting the style of the speech and manner of the people, without straying into parody, at least to my uneducated ears. I quickly got to caring about the characters and what happened to them. I would recommend it to anyone who likes good stories with detail which is part of the story, rather than the story merely being there as an excuse for the recitation of the details. I'll get around to the next volume before too long, I'm sure.
2 people found this helpful
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- Richard
- 07-08-13
Excellent piece of work
What did you love best about Master and Commander?
I enjoyed being immersed in a history work with a detailed focus on tall ship sailing and naval tactics
What other book might you compare Master and Commander to and why?
The Hornblower series because it is the same genre however this work emphasises the social relationships and norms of the time.
Would you listen to another book narrated by Ric Jerrom?
Yes excellent reading and acting
Did you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?
Not really
2 people found this helpful
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- Mermaid Hunter
- 03-08-12
A wonderful Age of Sail Story
Would you consider the audio edition of Master and Commander to be better than the print version?
Definitely different, but I am not about to compare apples and oranges
Who was your favorite character and why?
Stephen Maturin, he is the man of the enlightenment. He has stood behind ideals and became disillusioned, but he is still able to feel childlike joy.
Who was the most memorable character of Master and Commander and why?
It was the duo of Aubrey/Maturin (big surprise there) as the chemistry is simply right.
Any additional comments?
This book is heavy in nautical terms/slang.
If you don't like Age of Sail stories, consider to decrease the story rating by one or two stars.
If you want to read your first Age of Sail story, this can get you hooked, the print book did it for me.
2 people found this helpful
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- Ian
- 22-07-12
Balm for the nautical soul
What made the experience of listening to Master and Commander the most enjoyable?
Getting into the nautical life in the 1800's. There was much I haven't understood, but that's OK, I caught as much as I missed. The slow pace of much life under sail surprised me, but it makes sense when they were so reliant upon the wind.
Who was your favorite character and why?
Stephen - sensible, observant, reflective. A foil for the exuberant, shallow and somewhat oblivious Captain.
What does Ric Jerrom bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
Accents, emphasis
If you were to make a film of this book, what would be the tag line be?
Under sail in the Mediterranean - a doctor's story
Any additional comments?
Good book. From listening to previews, I am not sure the narrators of later books of the series have done as a good a job as this one.
2 people found this helpful
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- Griddiho
- 13-11-17
The Beginning of an Incredible Series...
I made a mistaking buying this audiobook. I wanted the version narrated by Simon Vance. So I was shocked when Ric Jerrom started reading the story to me. Initially, I was disappointed at my error but now I consider it a real stroke of luck. Simon Vance is a brilliant voice artist for sure, but Ric Jerrom give this tale (of sharp historical insight and high seas adventure) a more theatrical performance and it is a very nice contrast to Vance's reading (while is also brilliant). The story itself is in turn funny, insightful, vivid, and utterly gripping in its description of the (two) culminating conflicts. It is also the beginning of one of the greatest series every written. I had no particular interest in the great battle ships of the 1700s and 1800s, but after being exposed to Mr O'Brian's story I consider myself completely fascinated. (AUDIBLE 20 REVIEW SWEEPSTAKES ENTRY.)
1 person found this helpful
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- Ryan
- 01-10-16
Masterful!
All encompassing!
You truly get the gauge of naval life and the detail of the nautical battles are breath taking!
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- Amazon Customer
- 31-05-22
Incredible!
Most entertaining and interesting piece of great literature. Enjoyable from beginning to end.
How i wish they made more movies based in these type of literature.
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- Adam Caplan
- 24-10-21
Superb narration
One if the best narrated books i have ever had the pleasure. So professional and enjoyable