The Way to Watery Death, Rafael Sabatini
The Way to Watery Death, Rafael Sabatini
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The Way to Watery Death
Pirates, Buccaneers, Past, Present & Future Read by Dennis Edward Delaney

Author: Rafael Sabatini, Frank R. Stocton, Frank R. Stocton, Captain Charles Johnson, George O. Smith, David Earl DeWitt, Richard Middleton

Narrator: Dennis Edward Delaney

Unabridged: 5 hr 56 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/14/2025


Synopsis

About this AudiobookCover Design by David Earl DeWitt | ZacaPublishing.comOriginal and Public Domain Source Material was used to Publish this CollectionAvailable at Spotify & Other Distributors!–This Audiobook Collection contains Classic Stories of Piracy on the high seas from different eras in the history of Pirates and Buccaneers.–Your Stories:Forward1.) Pirates 20th Century Brand by Douglas Fairbanks Jr. 19512) Captain Blood by Rafael Sabatini 19223.) The Mutineers, a Tale of the Sea by Anonymous 18904.) The Buccaneer Boom by Frank R. Stocton 18985.) Peter the Great by Frank R. Stocton 18986.) A Pirate Potentate by Frank R. Stocton7.) Midwatch by David Earl DeWitt8.) The Life of Mary Read by Captain Charles Johnson 172419) The Impossible Pirate by George O. Smith 194610.) The Ghost Ship by Richard Middleton 191211.) The Real Captain Kidd by Frank R. Stocton -Run Time: 05:56:09.12-

About Rafael Sabatini

Known as "The Last of the Great Swashbucklers," Rafael Sabatini was an Italian-born author whose two lifelong passions-the demand for justice and the desire for tolerance-were common themes in his novels. His best-known works include The Sea-Hawk, Scaramouche, and Captain Blood, all of which were made into films.

Sabatini was born in 1875 in the small town of Jesi, Italy. His English mother and Italian father were both well-known opera singers. They traveled extensively, so they sent Rafael to live in England until he was seven. Rafael then lived in Portugal and Milan with his parents until he was sent to school in Switzerland. He was a voracious reader and became proficient in four languages. At age seventeen, his father sent him to Liverpool to work as a translator.

Sabatini began writing romances at the age of twenty, and his short fiction was published in a number of national magazines. In 1905, he quit his translator job to devote himself to writing full time, producing a book a year. That same year he married a daughter of a well-to-do Liverpool paper merchant, and four years later they had a son, Rafael-Angelo. Sabatini became a British citizen during World War I and worked in the British Intelligence as a translator. In the 1920s, with the publication of the international bestsellers Scaramouche and Captain Blood, he became an overnight success.

In 1927, Rafael was devastated by the death of their only child, who was killed in an automobile accident. He fell into a deep depression, wrote very little, divorced his wife, and suffered financially from the Great Depression. However, in 1931 life improved when he moved outside London to Wye and remarried at age sixty. In his later years, he spent his time writing, fishing, and skiing in Switzerland, where he died in 1950.


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