Bolinda Home Page

Login

Basket totals

Items:
0
Total:
AUD$ 0.00

Search Results

You searched for '18 April 2018-18 April 2021'. 5235 results were found.
To add items to your order, enter quantity and click 'add selected products to order'
Title:
Monsoon (MP3)
Series:
Courtney #10
Written by:
Wilbur Smith 
Read by:
Sean Barrett 
Format:
Unabridged MP3 CD Audio Book 
Number of CDs:
Duration:
30 hours 51 minutes 
MP3 size:
1.33 GB 
Published:
January 01 2021 
Available Date:
January 01 2021 
Age Category:
Adult 
ISBN:
9781867511304 
Genres:
Fiction; Crime & Thriller; Historical Fiction; Romance 
Publisher:
Bolinda/Audible audio 
Qty
Format
Price
Bolinda price
AUD$ 49.95
AUD$ 49.95
 

#1 bestselling author

Monsoon is Wilbur Smith's extraordinary new Courtney novel: a story of anger and passion, of peace and war. Action, romance and adventure shape a family's destiny as they contest a prize beyond any of their wildest dreams ...

The sun went down behind the storm clouds, and stained them with its blood, then the rain fell upon the ship in torrents. Solid sheets of water hammered the wooden decks so hard that the din drowned the men's voices and blotted out their vision. They leave as brothers. They must return as men. Famed sailor Hal Courtney is now a man of land and family. But when the King orders him to sail to Madagascar and stop the pirates responsible for looting the finest trading ships of the East India Trading Company and bringing ruin to them all, Hal must travel with his three younger sons on a journey that will shape the young men forever. In this swashbuckling adventure of marauders and slave traders, love and treasure, the brothers will face duels, chases, betrayals and battles – and see their fates cast in ways they could never have imagined ...

'Action is Smith's game, and he is a master.'
The Washington Post Book World

'Let yourself be blown away by the hurricane of storytelling that is Monsoon ... a fantastic reading experience.'
Sunday Times

'Wilbur Smith is one of those benchmarks against whom others are compared.'
The Times