Review: Captain Sedition: The Death of the Age of Reason by Kerry Fusaro

Review: Captain Sedition: The Death of the Age of Reason by Kerry Fusaro

Captain Sedition: The Death of the Age of Reason
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Description (from Amazon.com)

A politically ambivalent London courier gets embroiled in the American Revolution against his will.

Joethan Wolfe is a bravo and a rake, according to his particular friend, Benjamin Franklin, but Wolfe also possesses an unshakeable sense of honor. He’s a master horseman, fond of the ladies, and often too damned clever for his own good. But most of all, Wolfe is a son of a bitch in a fight.

1774 – on the cusp of the American Rebellion, expatriate Joethan Wolfe is called home to America. After fourteen years away, nothing is as remembered. Redcoats and Colonists, countrymen in name only, drink vast amounts of cheap rum and aspire to kill each other. Yet it’s the ironically named Prudence, a childhood playmate grown into a beautiful and fiery insurrectionist, that may prove most problematic.

From New York, through the slave fields of Connecticut, to the seat of British power in Boston, Wolfe negotiates a dangerous tightrope between rebels and the Crown, until the tightrope becomes a noose dragging him to Lexington and Concord, and the start of a bloody revolution that will shake the world. It’s a conflict he has no stake in and wants no part of, but fate has other ideas.

The Death of the Age of Reason is Book 1 of the Captain Sedition Revolutionary War saga.

Inspired by the likes of Bernard Cornwell and Patrick O’Brian.


5 stars

My Thoughts

I am not a huge fan of historical fiction unless I can place myself in the shoes of the characters…or boots or sandals. I take that back: pirate fiction is a different story, but I digress. While I’ve been in many places and visited many historic sites, I still struggle fully immersing myself in a book that is set some place I have not been. That was not entirely true of Captain Sedition: The Death of the Age of Reason by Kerry Fusaro. As soon as New Haven was brought into the picture, I was there…since I was just there last year.

Captain Sedition: The Death of the Age of Reason is a well-written and captivating historical novel set around the Revolutionary War with rich descriptions, compelling characters, and a depth that far exceeds many more well-known authors. Fusaro’s research was impressive and one of the main reasons I could become fully enmeshed. Despite there being a few historical inaccuracies (mentioned in the back of the book), they do not detract from the story.

The novel expertly weaves together storylines and transports the reader from Long Island to Connecticut to Boston. The dialogue is credible and convincing, and the author’s storytelling skills and vivid imagery bring it all to life with an intense, cinematic quality. The plot is intriguing and well-detailed, with well-rounded character development. Captain Sedition: The Death of the Age of Reason is an engrossing read, and I highly recommend this book to historical fiction fans, especially those with an interest in the Revolution. As this is the first in a three-part series, I will be returning to continue the story.

Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Captain-Sedition-Death-Age-Reason-ebook/dp/B08QZK4DTB/


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