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Booty: Girl Pirates on the High Seas by Sara…
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Booty: Girl Pirates on the High Seas

by Sara Lorimer

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1073102,632 (3.4)None
Recently added byprivate library, FinaleOfSeem, paperloverevolution, tonya29, Bookrarian, Jellyn, 1i11y, mimosa95
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    Grania: She-King of the Irish Seas by Morgan Llywelyn (DistortedSmile)
    DistortedSmile: A sweeping fictional biography on one of the most famous 'girl-pirates' of the ages.
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(Goodreads is showing me a Target ad I can't get rid of. This is a change I disapprove of!!)So this is a children's book about girl pirates. Arr!It covers a good span in time. I think from the 16th century right up until the 19th (maybe the 20th?). Some of the pirates are in the Americas, some are around England, and there's one in India and a couple in China. So there's a fairly good range of pirates in here.What I liked was at the start of telling us about a pirate, there'd be a map, showing their range. From Boston to Cuba for example. It helped me get a sense of their location. Especially in parts of the world that I can't picture in my head.Despite being a children's book, this isn't a book I could read in one sitting. I'd read one or two entries and then stop for the day. It's kind of dense, information-wise. That's what happens when you try to cover one pirate's life in about 3 pages.I did learn things, certainly. In a general sense, I discovered there were more female pirates than I would've thought. And the range of piracy is broader than what might traditionally come to mind. Some of them dressed as men at times, or all the time. Others didn't. Some got into piracy because of their fathers, or their husbands. Some, likely just because they felt like it. I didn't hear any tales of female pirates becoming pirates because their mothers were. (Though at least one son in here did.)Overall, a good overview of female pirates. And a good jumping-off place for picking one or two you want to know more about.It even mentioned how you'd go to the bathroom on a ship and how a woman might be able to hide her female attributes relatively easily. More easily than you'd think, given they're all living on this small ship together.The info in the back on shipboard life -- food, pirate punishments -- is worth the price of admission by itself. ( )
  Jellyn | Jul 23, 2012 |
Ultra-popularized account, of no use for scholarly inquiry. ( )
  phmx | Sep 27, 2007 |
good read; read on the way to Chicago ; went to see Pirate Queen.... Nice fit.
  lowensby | Jan 31, 2007 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0811832376, Paperback)

A treasure trove of high adventure and bad behavior, Booty tells the all-true tales of real women pirates who prowled the seas from the 9th to early-20th centuries in search of easy prey and easy profit. Raiding ships, boozing, brawling, and looting, they struck terror in the hearts of men from the Mediterranean to the South China Sea to the rivers of New York. Meet Rachel Wall, who traded her devout religious upbringing for "lewd and wicked company"; Cheng I Sao, who led a fleet of 2,000 ships and made her men drink cocktails of wine and gunpowder; Mary Read, who killed one pirate for the love of another; and Sadie the Goat, who headbutted her victims before fleecing them of cash. Their exploits and those of many more swashbuckling women fill these pages, along with salty illustrations and an informative look at the finer points of pirate life (grog, flogging, fashion, and more). Arrrrr.

(retrieved from Amazon Sun, 03 Mar 2013 19:36:51 -0500)

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