The Boy Slaves
Originally published in 1864. Four men are set adrift after the sinking of their British warship. One dies before he reaches land. The remaining three are taken into slavery by natives of the desert.

Mayne Reid, a pre-eminent and popular writer, was primarily a novelist (1818-1883) who wrote adventure stories from just before the Civil War until his death in 1883. Reid's career included two periods in the U. S: 1840-49 and 1867-70. He had emigrated to the United States in his early twenties, reaching New Orleans in January, 1840, where he pursued a varied career as a shopkeeper, overseer of slaves, schoolmaster, and actor, with occasional forays into hunting and Indian warfare. Reid returned to England in 1849, and embarked upon a successful career as a writer of adventure novels and books for boys He was a close friend of Poe (though their writings were miles apart), played a gallant role in the Mexican War, worked as a journalist and wrote most of his first novel while in the United States.

He was an influence on the young mind of Teddy Roosevelt, as Roosevelt reveals in his Autobiography; while Arthur Conan Doyle wrote in his 1890s essay "Juvenilia" that when young he always kept "Mr. Ballantyne or Captain Mayne Reid at my elbow"; Robert Louis Stevenson praised Reid in the Vailima Letters, and J. Frank Dobie has said he, "dared convey real information in his romances."

1100017277
The Boy Slaves
Originally published in 1864. Four men are set adrift after the sinking of their British warship. One dies before he reaches land. The remaining three are taken into slavery by natives of the desert.

Mayne Reid, a pre-eminent and popular writer, was primarily a novelist (1818-1883) who wrote adventure stories from just before the Civil War until his death in 1883. Reid's career included two periods in the U. S: 1840-49 and 1867-70. He had emigrated to the United States in his early twenties, reaching New Orleans in January, 1840, where he pursued a varied career as a shopkeeper, overseer of slaves, schoolmaster, and actor, with occasional forays into hunting and Indian warfare. Reid returned to England in 1849, and embarked upon a successful career as a writer of adventure novels and books for boys He was a close friend of Poe (though their writings were miles apart), played a gallant role in the Mexican War, worked as a journalist and wrote most of his first novel while in the United States.

He was an influence on the young mind of Teddy Roosevelt, as Roosevelt reveals in his Autobiography; while Arthur Conan Doyle wrote in his 1890s essay "Juvenilia" that when young he always kept "Mr. Ballantyne or Captain Mayne Reid at my elbow"; Robert Louis Stevenson praised Reid in the Vailima Letters, and J. Frank Dobie has said he, "dared convey real information in his romances."

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The Boy Slaves

The Boy Slaves

by Mayne Reid
The Boy Slaves

The Boy Slaves

by Mayne Reid

Paperback

$6.99 
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Overview

Originally published in 1864. Four men are set adrift after the sinking of their British warship. One dies before he reaches land. The remaining three are taken into slavery by natives of the desert.

Mayne Reid, a pre-eminent and popular writer, was primarily a novelist (1818-1883) who wrote adventure stories from just before the Civil War until his death in 1883. Reid's career included two periods in the U. S: 1840-49 and 1867-70. He had emigrated to the United States in his early twenties, reaching New Orleans in January, 1840, where he pursued a varied career as a shopkeeper, overseer of slaves, schoolmaster, and actor, with occasional forays into hunting and Indian warfare. Reid returned to England in 1849, and embarked upon a successful career as a writer of adventure novels and books for boys He was a close friend of Poe (though their writings were miles apart), played a gallant role in the Mexican War, worked as a journalist and wrote most of his first novel while in the United States.

He was an influence on the young mind of Teddy Roosevelt, as Roosevelt reveals in his Autobiography; while Arthur Conan Doyle wrote in his 1890s essay "Juvenilia" that when young he always kept "Mr. Ballantyne or Captain Mayne Reid at my elbow"; Robert Louis Stevenson praised Reid in the Vailima Letters, and J. Frank Dobie has said he, "dared convey real information in his romances."


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781515171546
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing
Publication date: 07/21/2015
Pages: 100
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 11.00(h) x 0.21(d)

Table of Contents

I.The Land of the Slave1
II.Types of the Triple Kingdom4
III.The Serpent's Tongue8
IV.'Ware the Tide!18
V.A False Guide16
VI.Wade or Swim?18
VII.A Compulsory Parting21
VIII.Safe Ashore24
IX.Uncomfortable Quarters29
XI.'Ware the Sand!35
XII.A Mysterious Nightmare40
XIII.The Maherry46
XIV.A Liquid Breakfast49
XV.The Sailor among the Shell-fish52
XVI.Keeping under Cover56
XVII.The Trail on the Sand60
XVIII.The "Desert Ship"63
XIX.Homeward Bound66
XX.The Dance Interrupted69
XXI.A Serio-Comical Reception73
XXII.The Two Sheiks76
XXIII.Sailor Bill Beshrewed80
XXIV.Starting on the Track83
XXVBill to be Abandoned88
XXVI.A Cautious Retreat88
XXVII.A Queer Quadruped93
XXVIII.The Hue and Cry96
XXIX.A Subaqueous Asylum99
XXX.The Pursuers Nonplussed102
XXXI.A Double Predicament105
XXXII.Once more the mocking Laugh109
XXXIII.A Cunning Sheik112
XXXIV.A Queer Encounter114
XXXV.Holding on to the Hump118
XXXVI.Our Adventurers in Undress121
XXXVII.The Captives in Conversation123
XXXVIII.The Douar at Dawn127
XXXIX.An Obstinate Dromedary129
XL.Watering the Camels132
XLI.A Squabble between the Sheiks135
XLII.The Trio Staked138
XLIII.Golah142
XLIV.A Day of Agony147
XLV.Colin in Luck152
XLVI.Sailor Bill's Experiment155
XLVII.An Unjust Reward159
XLVIII.The Waterless Well164
XLIX.The Well170
L.A Momentous Inquiry175
LI.A Living Grave180
LII.The Sheik's Plan of Revenge184
LIII.Captured Again190
LIV.An Unfaithful Wife195
LV.Two Faithful Wives200
LVI.Fatima's Fate205
LVII.Further Defection209
LVIII.A Call for Two More214
LIX.Once More by the Sea219
LX.Golaii Calls Again224
LXI.Sailor Bill Standing Sentry228
LXII.Golah Fulfils his Destiny233
LXIII.On the Edge of the Saara237
LXIV.The Rival Wreckers240
LXV.Another White Slave245
LXVI.Sailor Bill's Brother251
LXVII.A Living Stream254
LXVIII.The Arabs at Home258
LXIX.Work or Die262
LXX.Victory!267
LXXI.Sold Again270
LXXII.Onward Once More276
LXXIII.Another Bargain279
LXXIV.More Torture283
LXXV.En Route286
LXXVI.Hope Deferred289
LXXVII.El Hajji292
LXXVIII.Bo Muzem's Journey297
LXXIX.Rais Mourad300
LXXX.Bo Muzem Back Again304
LXXXI.A Pursuit308
LXXXII.Moorish Justice312
LXXXIII.The Jew's Leap316
LXXXIV.Conclusion319
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