Normans Cay

by Paul Boardman


Formats

Softcover
£14.49
£11.75
Softcover
£11.75

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 23/08/2005

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 416
ISBN : 9781420865226

About the Book

Paul Boardman takes the reader on a thrilling treasure hunt adventure for sunken gold. With the discovery of a two hundred year old letter, the treasure hunters follow clues in the letter to the private island of Normans Cay, in the Bahamas, but their hunt for treasure hunt is discovered by modern day pirates of the sea … drug smugglers!

Boardman uses his experience as a yachtsman to full advantage in presenting to the reader the dream of two couples finding treasure while pitted against dangerous smugglers.

Normans Cay is not just another treasure hunt adventure, but a unique story depicting what a couple with a yacht and a dream might face in today’s dangerous seas. This is a novel for all sea travelers.

 

Disclaimer

Normans Cay is a tiny island, in the Bahamas, that was reputed to be the epicenter of the drug trade in the 1980''s. Resulting from pressure by United States, the island was raided by a Bahamian task force in 1982. A result of that raid, a plane wreck, still litters the shallow water off the cay.

Although this novel is set in Normans Cay the characters and dialogues are creations of the author''s imagination and do not portray actual persons or events. 

 


About the Author

Paul Boardman’s real life love affair with the sea, whether it be from the topsides of his boat or diving on a coral reef, is evident in his novel Normans Cay.

 

“My main goal in writing this book was for it to be entertaining … not too heavy … no need to save the world. Philosophically, when writing the book I often felt the need to escape the drudgery of day by day business. Remember Steve Martin’s line; “Sorry, I just took a quick trip to the Bahamas”. Personally, I accomplished that as I sat at my computer and dove into shipwrecks, love affairs, murder and battles with drug lords. My real goal, though, was to create an escape for the reader. When a good friend said he got half way through and couldn’t put it down … well, that felt alright”.