The Commander of the ‘Hirondelle.’ With 16 Full-page Illustrations. Crown 8vo. 6s.
ATHENÆUM.—‘An admirable sea story.... It is good literature, too, and written with historical and technical knowledge.’
Nelson and his Captains; Sketches of Famous Seamen. With 11 Portraits and a Facsimile Letter. Third Impression. Crown 8vo. 6s.
PUNCH.—‘My Baronite having read all Dr. Fitchett’s tales of battles on land, thinks his best piece is his sea piece.... Saxon and Celt reading the glowing narrative will feel proud to know it’s all true.’
The Tale of the Great Mutiny. SEVENTH AND CONSIDERABLY ENLARGED IMPRESSION. With 8 Portraits and 4 Plans. Crown 8vo. 6s.
GUARDIAN.—‘It is almost impossible to lay the book down. The story of those summer months of 1857 must ever appeal to English readers.’
BOOKMAN.—‘Written with all the swing and dash, with all the careful accuracy and brilliant descriptive power which have made Dr. Fitchett’s books so deservedly popular.’
How England Saved Europe: the story of the Great War (1793–1815). SECOND IMPRESSION. In 4 vols. crown 8vo. with Portraits. Facsimiles, and Plans, 6s. each.
TIMES.—‘It is not without significance that this excellent “Story of the Great War,” at once popular in the best sense, well informed, full of instruction, and very attractively written, should be the work of a Colonial writer.’
GUARDIAN.—‘Mr. Fitchett has achieved a real success, and the boy who cannot read these volumes with pleasure (and profit) is hopeless. They are, if boyhood would but see it, more enthralling than half the novels published.’