Isacq

Nonfiction, History, Africa, South Africa
Cover of the book Isacq by Peter Richard Dreyer, Hardware River Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Peter Richard Dreyer ISBN: 9780999288818
Publisher: Hardware River Press Publication: November 15, 2017
Imprint: Hardware River Press Language: English
Author: Peter Richard Dreyer
ISBN: 9780999288818
Publisher: Hardware River Press
Publication: November 15, 2017
Imprint: Hardware River Press
Language: English

Isacq is fiction based on the early life of the author's direct ancestor Johannes Augustinus Dreyer (1689–1759). Commencing with a long flashback from the Cape of Good Hope in 1738, it novelizes his adventures in the five years from 1708, when he was a student at the University of Rostock, to 1713, when he signed on with the Dutch East India Company as an adelbors, or midshipman, under the Catalan alias Isacq d’Algué (“of Alghero”). He would go by this alias for many years at the Cape, until he admitted his real identity in his last will and testament and asked his children to resume using the surname Dreyer.

Isacq fights a fatal duel in Swedish Wismar, flees to London, enters the English secret service under the spymaster-novelist Daniel Defoe, is sent as a secret agent to Herrenhausen, the palace at Hannover of the Elector Georg Ludwig (the future King George I of England), where he is employed by the philosopher Leibniz and imagines himself foiling a Jacobite plot to murder the Elector and his son. He falls in love, ships out on a Dutch vessel in the War of the Spanish Succession, is captured by Algerine pirates in the Mediterranean, escapes when their xebec is sunk, and travels across Sardinia to the Catalan city of Alghero, which has become an Allied base supplying the troops fighting in Spain.

On November 8, 1713, the man calling himself Isacq d’Algué arrived at the Cape, where he would marry and father six children, from whom many thousands of South Africans alive today are descended, the author of this novel among them.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Isacq is fiction based on the early life of the author's direct ancestor Johannes Augustinus Dreyer (1689–1759). Commencing with a long flashback from the Cape of Good Hope in 1738, it novelizes his adventures in the five years from 1708, when he was a student at the University of Rostock, to 1713, when he signed on with the Dutch East India Company as an adelbors, or midshipman, under the Catalan alias Isacq d’Algué (“of Alghero”). He would go by this alias for many years at the Cape, until he admitted his real identity in his last will and testament and asked his children to resume using the surname Dreyer.

Isacq fights a fatal duel in Swedish Wismar, flees to London, enters the English secret service under the spymaster-novelist Daniel Defoe, is sent as a secret agent to Herrenhausen, the palace at Hannover of the Elector Georg Ludwig (the future King George I of England), where he is employed by the philosopher Leibniz and imagines himself foiling a Jacobite plot to murder the Elector and his son. He falls in love, ships out on a Dutch vessel in the War of the Spanish Succession, is captured by Algerine pirates in the Mediterranean, escapes when their xebec is sunk, and travels across Sardinia to the Catalan city of Alghero, which has become an Allied base supplying the troops fighting in Spain.

On November 8, 1713, the man calling himself Isacq d’Algué arrived at the Cape, where he would marry and father six children, from whom many thousands of South Africans alive today are descended, the author of this novel among them.

More books from South Africa

Cover of the book A Rainbow in the Night by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book Zimbabwe and Democracy by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book The Prison Letters of Nelson Mandela by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book Fears, Tears, Cheers and Hope by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book The End of Apartheid by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book TIME Nelson Mandela by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book The Cultural Politics of Female Sexuality in South Africa by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book Emergence of Systems of Innovation in South(ern) Africa: by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book The Complete Concise History of the Slave Trade by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book A U.S. Air Force Strategy for Africa: Airpower, Geography, Current Activities and Guidance, What Can Airmen Expect in Africa, How Should Airmen Think About Africa? by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book Baden-Powell - The Hero of Mafeking by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book Unreasonable Histories by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book Diamonds, Gold, and War by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book Rwanda : Mille collines, mille douleurs by Peter Richard Dreyer
Cover of the book The Great Silence by Peter Richard Dreyer
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy