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Douglas Edward Reeman (15 October 1924 – 23 January 2017 [1] [2]), who also used the pseudonym Alexander Kent, was a British author who wrote many historical novels about the Royal Navy, mainly set during either World War II or the Napoleonic Wars. He wrote a total of 68 novels, selling 34 million copies in twenty languages.
The name Bolitho is a common Cornish surname, but Reeman says that he borrowed the name Richard Bolitho from a real person, "a distinguished old chap" he had met in the Channel Islands when he sailed his boat there. [citation needed] Reeman also states that the real Richard Bolitho was the brother of the Lord Lieutenant of Cornwall.
HMS Saracen (1908) was a Tribal-class destroyer launched in 1908 and sold in 1919. HMS ... a 1965 book by Douglas Reeman This page was last edited on 24 December ...
Richard Bolitho, Midshipman is a novel in the Bolitho series of nautical fiction set in the late-18th-century Royal Navy, written by Douglas Reeman under the pseudonym Alexander Kent. The book was published in 1975.
HMS Viperous is the name of a fictional V and W-class destroyer in the novel The Cruel Sea by Nicholas Monsarrat, the leader of an escort group including Compass Rose, the focus of the first part of the story. HMS Warlock is the name of the leader of a flotilla of eight fictional destroyers in the 1974 novel The Destroyers by Douglas Reeman.
The Destroyer is a series of paperback novels about a U.S. government operative named Remo Williams, originally by Warren Murphy and Richard Sapir. The first novel was published in 1971, although the manuscript was completed on June 25, 1963. [ 1 ]
Greatest Hits: 30 Years of Rock is a compilation album by George Thorogood and the Destroyers, released in 2004. [4] The album celebrates 30 years of the band, [5] and includes two tracks which are new versions of previously released hits.
Boogie People is the eighth studio album by American blues rock band George Thorogood and the Destroyers.It was released in 1991 by the label EMI America Records. [1] [2] [3] The album was not as successful as Thorogood's previous albums, but it did contain the song "If You Don't Start Drinkin' (I'm Gonna Leave)", which eventually became a concert staple.