Nautical & Marine Fiction audiobooks


Captains Courageous

Captains Courageous

by Rudyard Kipling

Captains Courageous is an 1897 novel, by Rudyard Kipling, that follows the adventures of fifteen-year-old Harvey Cheyne Jr., the spoiled son of a railroad tycoon, after he is saved from drowning by a Portuguese fisherman in the north Atlantic. The novel originally appeared as a serialisation in McClure's, beginning with the November 1896 edition. I..

Robinson Crusoe

Robinson Crusoe

by Daniel Defoe

The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe is a novel written by Daniel Defoe inspired by the real life experiences of  the Scottish sailor Alexander Selkirk. This novel narrates the adventurous journey of a sailor whose shipwreck turned his life to staying alone for decades in Islands where only Cannibals lived.  While Robinson Crusoe's parents wa..

Howard Pyle's Book of Pirates

Howard Pyle's Book of Pirates

by Howard Pyle

Howard Pyle (March 5, 1853 – November 9, 1911) was an American illustrator and author, primarily of books for young people. He was a native of Wilmington, Delaware, and he spent the last year of his life in Florence, Italy...

Typhoon

Typhoon

by Joseph Conrad

Typhoon is a classic sea yarn, possibly based upon Conrad's actual experience of seaman's life, and probably on a real incident aboard of the steamer John P. Best (according to the book by Jerry Allen on the "Sea years of Joseph Conrad", first published in 1965). The author of the mentioned book - an American journalist - did not reveal in her book..

An Outcast Of The Islands

An Outcast Of The Islands

by Joseph Conrad

An Outcast of the Islands is the second novel by Joseph Conrad, published in 1896, inspired by Conrad's experience as mate of a steamer, the Vidar. The novel details the undoing of Peter Willems, a disreputable, immoral man who, on the run from a scandal in Makassar, finds refuge in a hidden native village, only to betray his benefactors over lust ..

Can Such Things Be?

Can Such Things Be?

by Ambrose Bierce

Ambrose Bierce never owned a horse, a carriage, or a car; he was a renter who never owned his own home. He was a man on the move, a man who traveled light: and in the end he rode, with all of his possessions, on a rented horse into the Mexican desert to join Pancho Villa -- never to return.Can Such Things Be?Once William Randolph Hearst -- Bierce's..