"No one who is interested in the history of the eighteenth century can afford to ignore this book."
- Christopher Hill, Oxford University
"In this important book, Marcus Rediker embeds rich empirical research within an impressive
theoretical framework. The result is a fresh and powerful analysis of the eighteenth-century
maritime world that will quickly establish the author as a leading scholar in Anglo-American labor
history." - Gary B. Nash, UCLA
"Triumphant . . . What distinguishes Rediker's work is his unwavering and unsentimental focus
on the seaman's labour and experience in his cramped wooden world." - E.P. Thompson, The Guardian
"The author shows an assured mastery of his vast library of sources and evidence to give us not
only insight into seagoing life in all its respects but also into the mind and heart of the common
sailor. The book is also revealing about the rise of mercantile capitalism in Britain and America
and its reliance on seaborne trade. Above all, it is a compelling, readable text that carries the
reader along almost as effortlessly as any nautical yarn." - Lloyd's List |