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Paul Butler (5) (1964–)

Author of Rogues and Heroes

For other authors named Paul Butler, see the disambiguation page.

11 Works 65 Members 1 Review

Works by Paul Butler

Rogues and Heroes (2005) 12 copies, 1 review
Easton (2004) 10 copies
St. John's, city of fire (2007) 9 copies
NaGeira (2006) 7 copies
Cupids (2010) 6 copies
Stoker's Shadow (2003) 5 copies
Hero (2009) 4 copies
Easton's Gold (2005) 4 copies
Titanic Ashes (2012) 4 copies
1892 (2008) 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1964
Gender
male
Occupations
journalist
teacher
editor
Relationships
Hanrahan, Maura (wife)
Places of residence
UK
St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada

Members

Reviews

1 review
Decisiveness isn't all it's cracked up to be.

This is a fascinating idea: A set of capsule biographies (the average is about six pages; given the type size and the number of sidebars and photos and such, I'd guess they were shooting for 1000-1200 words each) of Newfoundlanders who were either heroes or people you didn't want to be around. It's a nice, gentle way to be introduced to noteworthy historical characters.

Of course, the problem with such short bios is that they don't allow for much show more in-depth study. This makes it hard to convey nuance. But... the authors could have tried. And therein lies my real gripe.

I'm not a Newfoundlander. I know just enough to know how little I know about their culture -- which is not Canadian. (Most of the characters in the book weren't Canadian, either; they lived before Newfoundland joined Canada.) But I have studied several of the characters in this book -- notably Abram Kean the sealing captain and Robert A. Bartlett the sealing captain and arctic explorer -- in detail.

The portrait of Bartlett is the one that bothered me most. The story told here is so one-sided as to be utterly misleading. Bartlett was a brave and dedicated man with wide-ranging interests. He was also, flatly, dangerous -- incapable of caution, unable to imagine the consequences of his actions, immune to learning from his experience. Men died and ships were lost because he couldn't manage a coherent plan of action. And he let Robert Peary lead him around by the nose. Does Bartlett deserve praise? Sure. But he also should be used as a cautionary tale. Even in 1200 words, the authors could have presented a fuller picture, and they didn't.

Are the other bios as incomplete? I don't know, because I haven't studied the people involved. But when there are problems with the parts of a book that I can check, I tend to get cautious about the parts that I can't.... Clearly the authors have often decided that their characters are either Good Guy or Bad Guy. I could use a few more "Er... Well..." Guys.
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Statistics

Works
11
Members
65
Popularity
#261,993
Rating
3.0
Reviews
1
ISBNs
95

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