Castaways
by
Book Details
About the Book
A present-day teenage couple, Mike Gardner and Jennifer Owens, are students on a training ship off the Mike is knocked unconscious. As he comes to he realizes the ship is under fire. His first thought is terrorists, but he soon learns he’s actually on a real British frigate, HMS Swift, the firing is from a French shore battery, it is 1805, and he has somehow taken over the body of one of the ship’s midshipmen, Peter Southby. Based on his confusion and panic, the ship’s doctor concludes that Mike (Peter) is suffering from amnesia. Jennifer is washed ashore on a French beach nearby. She is later rescued by Mike and the crew of Swift and eventually made the doctor’s assistant. The mission of Swift is to watch for any French ships that try to run the British blockade of Mike is soon in action as part of an expedition in ship’s boats to “cut-out” a French sloop-of-war anchored just inside Once ashore, the two travel to the home of Mike’s “parents,” whom neither have met before. There, Jennifer learns she is now Catherine Devers, who is engaged to marry the politically powerful Lord Wolvington. She also learns that he owns slaves on his plantation in the U. S. Horrified, she vows to escape, with Mike’s help, to someplace where Lord Wolvington and his men can never find them...
About the Author
Mr Jones served as a U.S. Air Force fighter pilot, flying the F-101B Voodoo, one of the early supersonic fighters. Later, he worked as an engineer for NASA on the Apollo Project, where he helped train the first two groups of astronauts in the mission simulators. After Apollo, he worked on various classified space projects in the aerospace industry. Still an active pilot, he flies high-performance sailplanes in the
A life-long sailor, and a student of the British navy in the Napoleonic wars, he also volunteers at the San Diego Maritime Museum where he serves as a docent, either at the museum or at sea on the tall ship “Californian.”
He has published numerous articles and memoirs of flying and sailing, three young adult novels, and an aviation novel, “Pug 66”, set in the