Horatio Hornblower: Difference between revisions
imported>Chris Day (in retrospect I think the problem is that the Happy return was not called flying colours) |
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
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'''Horatio Hornblower''' is a fictional officer in the [[Royal Navy]], created by [[C.S. Forester]], with significant similarity to [[Horatio Nelson]]. | '''Horatio Hornblower''' is a fictional officer in the [[Royal Navy]], created by [[C.S. Forester]], with significant similarity to [[Horatio Nelson]]. | ||
Forester, a pseudonym for Cecil Louis Troughton Smith, wrote many nautical works, some fictional and some not, some under his name and others under pseudonyms such as . The Hornblower | Forester, a pseudonym for Cecil Louis Troughton Smith, wrote many nautical works, some fictional and some not, some under his name and others under pseudonyms such as . The Hornblower works were the best-known written under that name, although he also wrote a shorter series on the [[Peninsular War]]. | ||
The Hornblower character became the standard for naval historical writing; other authors' works, both Napoleonic era historical fiction such as the [[ | The Hornblower character became the standard for naval historical writing; other authors' works, both Napoleonic era historical fiction such as the [[Aubrey-Maturin]] series, and science fiction about future navies, such as the [[Honor Harrington]] universe, often are described as "Hornblower-like". | ||
==The books== | ==The books== | ||
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==Derivatives== | ==Derivatives== | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} |
Revision as of 13:11, 17 March 2009
Horatio Hornblower is a fictional officer in the Royal Navy, created by C.S. Forester, with significant similarity to Horatio Nelson.
Forester, a pseudonym for Cecil Louis Troughton Smith, wrote many nautical works, some fictional and some not, some under his name and others under pseudonyms such as . The Hornblower works were the best-known written under that name, although he also wrote a shorter series on the Peninsular War.
The Hornblower character became the standard for naval historical writing; other authors' works, both Napoleonic era historical fiction such as the Aubrey-Maturin series, and science fiction about future navies, such as the Honor Harrington universe, often are described as "Hornblower-like".
The books
The novels were not published in order of the character's career. The first novel Forester wrote about Hornblower was published under the somewhat ironic title The Happy Return. It took place in the middle of his career, as a junior captain on an independent command. It took place in the Pacific Ocean, complicated by Spain switching from being allied to Napoleon Bonaparte's France, to being an ally of the United Kingdom.
Other books take the reader back to his first days in the navy, and to the highest ranks. Hornblower and the Crisis is a collection of stories and novelettes, with vignettes from his midshipman days, to a story in his retirement as Admiral of the Fleet. Forester also wrote The Hornblower Companion, a guide to the series written as a biography of the fictional character.
Order in character life | Publication order | Character rank |
---|---|---|
Midshipman Hornblower | Midshipman and lieutenant | |
Lieutenant Hornblower | Lieutenant and commander* | |
Hornblower and the Hotspur | Commander and junior captain* | |
Hornblower and the Atropos | Commander and junior captain* | |
Flying Colours | Mid-level captain (frigate) | |
Ship of the Line | Senior captain third-rate ship | |
Lord Hornblower | Senior captain | |
Commodore Hornblower | Commodore | |
Admiral Hornblower in the West Indies | Rear admiral |