#BookReview The Ghost Ship by Kate Mosse @MantleBooks

About the Book

The Barbary Coast, 1621. A mysterious vessel floats silently on the water. It is known only as the Ghost Ship. For months, its captain – Louise Reydon-Joubert – and her courageous crew has hunted pirates to liberate those enslaved during the course of their merciless raids.

But now the Ghost Ship is under attack – its hull splintered, its sails tattered and burnt, and the crew at risk of capture. But the bravest among them are not who they seem. Louise is fleeing a miscarriage of justice; her lover, Gilles Barenton, is at risk of being exposed – she is forced to masquerade as her brother. The stakes could not be higher: if arrested, they will be hanged for their crimes.

Can they survive the journey and escape their fate?

Format: Hardback (496 pages) Publisher: Mantle
Publication date: 6th July 2023 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find The Ghost Ship (The Burning Chambers, #3) on Goodreads

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My Review

In The Ghost Ship the publishers promise us ‘piracy, romance, revenge’ and the book certainly delivers on all three. The Ghost Ship is the third book in the series following the fortunes – and misfortunes – of various generations of the Joubert family. I’ve read both the previous books in the series – The Burning Chambers and The City of Tears – as well as plenty more of Kate Mosse’s other books so I know she is a consummate storyteller and once again she doesn’t disappoint.

Although some characters make a return appearance, such as Marguerite ‘Minou’ Reydon-Joubert and her husband Piet, and the storyline involving a disputed inheritance and a desire for revenge continues from the earlier books, I would say The Ghost Ship is the easiest book in the series to read as a standalone because it moves quickly from historical saga to maritime adventure – and love story. For new readers, the author includes some recaps of events in earlier books and a helpful list of principal characters.

Historical detail has always been a strong point of Kate Mosse’s books so much so that you can easily imagine yourself walking the streets of Amsterdam or the quayside of La Rochelle, or later in the book, the Canary Islands. And, in this book, you can add to that what it would be like to be onboard a trading ship, one that at any moment might come under attack from corsairs.

Louise Reydon-Joubert makes a spirited protagonist, determined not to let her gender prevent her achieving her ambition to become captain of her own ship, an ambition she has harboured (if you’ll pardon the pun) ever since her first experience aboard a ship as a young girl. In this, Cornelia van Raay, the companion of Louise’s great-aunt, provides an example of a woman making her way in a man’s world, and one in an unconvential relationship. However, several things – and individuals – stand in Louise’s way and even when one of those is unexpectedly removed it doesn’t mean the end of her troubles, but in fact just the beginning.

An encounter with a corsair galley propelled by slaves chained to its oars sets Louise on a path that sees her and the crew of the Old Moon embark on a new and very dangerous mission. Horrified by the idea of a trade in human lives, she sets out to disrupt the corsairs’ activities. ‘She was determined to become not a pirate herself, but the scourge of pirates – a ‘she-captain’, the huntress and hellion of the high seas.’ Unfortunately, pirates are not the only opposition she faces because legitimate merchants are also starting to scent the possibility of profit from transporting human cargo rather than grain or other goods. And although Louise proves her worth to her crew there are people who simply cannot accept a woman as captain of a ship. (Cue the famous line from a Monty Python sketch, “Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!”)

Louise’s companion in her endeavours is Gilles Barenton who has his own reasons for wanting to escape his past. Their paths become entwined in the most dramatic way, triggering long buried memories of bloody events in Louise’s own childhood.

Kate Mosse doesn’t write short books but, despite its length, The Ghost Ship is a thrilling page-turner with a story that will sweep you along and some brilliant action scenes. (My one grumble is that I think the blurb gives too much of the story away.) As is her way, the author leaves us with a tantalising introduction to the next book in the series, set in Cape Town.

I received a digital review copy courtesy of Pan Macmillan via NetGalley.

In three words: Dramatic, immersive, compelling

Try something similarFled by Meg Keneally


About the Author

Kate Mosse is an award-winning novelist, playwright, essayist and non-fiction writer. The author of ten novels and short-story collections, her books have been translated into thirty-eight languages and published in more than forty countries. Fiction includes the multimillion-selling Languedoc Trilogy, the Joubert Family Chronicles (the number one bestseller The Burning ChambersThe City of Tears, and The Ghost Ship), and number one bestselling Gothic fiction. Her highly-acclaimed non-fiction includes An Extra Pair of Hands and Warrior Queens & Quiet Revolutionaries: How Women (Also) Built the World.

The Founder Director of the Women’s Prize for Fiction, she is the Founder of the global #WomanInHistory campaign and has her own monthly YouTube book show, Mosse on a Monday. A Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, Kate is a Visiting Professor of Contemporary Fiction and Creative Writing at the University of Chichester and President of the Festival of Chichester.

Connect with Kate
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20 Books Of Summer 2023 Reading Challenge Wrap-Up #20booksofsummer23

20-books-of-summerThis annual challenge run by my namesake Cathy at 746 Books has finished for another year. And, for another year, I failed to read all twenty of the books I put on my list, a result of a combination of over-enthusiasm and a stubborn (masochistic?) refusal to take advantage of the accommodating rules allowing you to swap books in and out of your list or reduce your goal.

In the end, I managed to read eight books from my original list of twenty. Disappointed? A little, but on the other hand pleased that I finally got around to reading some books that had been in my TBR pile for up to five years. And, during the period of the challenge – from Thursday 1st June to Friday 1st September 2023 – I actually read twenty-four other books. If I’d wanted an easy life, I’d have put some of those on my list….

I’m going to try to read the remaining books on my challenge list between now and the end of the year. I do not want them to have to appear on next year’s list!


20 Books of Summer 2023 Wrap-UpBooks on my original list I read (links from each title will take you to my review)

  1. Treason by James Jackson
  2. The Painter of Souls by Philip Kazan
  3. China Blue by Madalyn Morgan
  4. Chasing Ghosts by Madalyn Morgan
  5. Wrecker by Noel O’Reilly – review to follow
  6. Invitation to a Bonfire by Adrienne Celt
  7. A Stranger in my Grave by Margaret Millar
  8. The Night Raids by Jim Kelly

Books on my original list still waiting to be read (links from each title will take you to Goodreads)

  1. Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz (waiting since October 2017)
  2. Transcription by Kate Atkinson (waiting since January 2018)
  3. The Draughtsman by Robert Lautner (waiting since March 2018)
  4. The Legacy of Elizabeth Pringle by Kirsty Wark (waiting since March 2018)
  5. Appetite by Philip Kazan (waiting since April 2018)
  6. Anna of Kleve by Alison Weir (waiting since June 2018)
  7. Blood Orange by Harriet Tyce (waiting since March 2019)
  8. Finding Dorothy by Elizabeth Letts (waiting since March 2019)
  9. In Two Minds by Alis Hawkins (waiting since March 2019)
  10. The Cross and the Curse by Matthew Harffy (waiting since May 2019)
  11. The Forgotten Letters of Esther Durrant by Kayte Nunn (waiting since February 2020)
  12. To Calais, In Ordinary Time by James Meek (waiting since February 2020)

Books I read not on my list (links from each title will take you to my review)

  1. Ancestry by Simon Mawer
  2. Hokey Pokey by Kate Mascarenhas
  3. The Last Lifeboat by Hazel Gaynor
  4. The Geometer Lobachevsky by Adrian Duncan
  5. The Wall by Adrian Goldsworthy
  6. The Voluble Topsy by A. P. Herbert
  7. Voices of the Dead by Ambrose Parry
  8. The Square of Sevens by Laura Shepherd-Robinson
  9. Banyan Moon by Thao Thai
  10. The Blood of Others by Graham Hurley
  11. Before the Swallows Come Back by Fiona Curnow
  12. In Defence of the Act by Effie Black
  13. The Soldier’s Child by Tetyana Denford
  14. Para Bellum by Simon Turney
  15. The Unheard by Anne Worthington
  16. Before We Were Innocent by Ella Berman
  17. Unnatural Ends by Christopher Huang
  18. The Black Crescent by Jane Johnson
  19. The Hollow Throne by Tim Leach
  20. The Well of Saint Nobody by Neil Jordan
  21. A Fenland Garden by Francis Pryor
  22. The Seventh Son by Seabastian Faulks – review to follow
  23. The Postcard by Carly Schabowski
  24. The Ghost Ship by Kate Mosse – review to follow

If you took part in the challenge, how did you get on?