The Pirate Hunter: The True Story of Captain Kidd

The Pirate Hunter: The True Story of Captain Kidd

by RichardZacks (Author)

Synopsis

This is a tale of swashbuckling adventure on the high seas of the 17th century. Captain William Kidd was not actually a pirate, but employed by King William III to track down pirates and requisition their treasure - the semi-legal role of the "privateer". As a counterpoint to his story, Zacks also tells the forgotten story of his great rival, Robert Culliford, an utterly ruthless buccaneer who flew a blood red flag which signified "no mercy" and whose surgeon was named Jon Death. Kidd's and Culliford's paths were to cross again and again during the course of their lives, but in a tale of double-crossing, betrayal and political scandal, the outcome was not as expected. One of these men would end up hanging on the gallows of the London dockside; the other would walk away with the treasure.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 432
Edition: First UK Edition First Impression
Publisher: Headline Review
Published: 03 Feb 2003

ISBN 10: 0755311310
ISBN 13: 9780755311316

Media Reviews
Blood and thunder on the high seas of the 17th century. Captain William Kidd was in fact a 'privateer' not a pirate - employed by King William III to undertake a semi-legal secret mission to track down pirates and recover their spoils (keeping their booty for himself and his high-born investors, naturally). As a counterpoint to this, Richard Zacks fascinatingly details the forgotten story of Kidd's great rival, Robert Culliford, a ruthless buccaneer who flew a blood-red flag which signified 'no mercy' and whose surgeon was named Jon Death. Kidd's and Culliford's paths were to cross again and again during the course of their lives, but in a tale of double-crossing, betrayal and political scandal, the outcome was surprising. Zacks brings a colourful period of history to vivid life.
Author Bio
Richard Zacks has spent three years researching the true story of Kidd, following in his footsteps and patiently sitting through the hundreds of pages of trial transcripts, letters and log books that still survive.