There’s always room for another treatment of the Blackbeard story, especially with two worthy adversaries.
The early 18th century was the great age of piracy in the Caribbean and off the East Coast of America. The most notorious of those pirates was Edward Teach, aka Blackbeard. On the other side was Lt. Robert Maynard, of the Royal Navy. Doggett’s historical novel begins as Maynard and his superior, Capt. Ellis Brand, have been ordered to find and arrest the brigand and end his reign of terror. To sweeten the pot, the King has decreed that pirates who abjure their wicked ways within a year will be pardoned. (At one point, Teach raises the possibility of a pardon to his crew but backs down.) We first meet the pirates at New Providence, their “capital” in the Bahamas. Pirate Woodes Rogers has accepted the pardon and been named governor of those islands. When he sails in to take up his protective new position, the pirates give him a fiery welcome and go off a-plundering. Blackbeard, with his captured French slave ship now christened the “Queen Anne’s Revenge,” along with his confederate Richard Richards captaining another “Revenge,” eventually make their way to Charles Town in South Carolina, blockade the port, and bleed the town dry of its treasure. Now Brand and Maynard are more determined than ever to catch their quarry. Eventually, off the coast of North Carolina, there comes a showdown, Blackbeard and Maynard, mano a mano, and the decks become awash with blood. History buffs will know the end result, but there are no spoilers here. Blackbeard says, prophetically, “Your name will be known only because of mine, Mr. Maynard.” Teach was an actual, historical, person and tailor made for the character that we know: a larger-than-life man who played the part of a demon from Hell so well that his prey usually gave up without a fight. His fate, ably told here, is very fitting. Doggett knows the pirate idiom well and creates some nuanced characters, Blackbeard the most fascinatingly realized of them all.
A worthwhile addition to the Blackbeard canon.