Burning Islands : The Archipelago on Fire

This audiobook is narrated by an AI Voice. The Aegean, 1827. Greece burns for independence—and one French officer is caught between duty, justice, and impossible love.

Lieutenant Henry d'Albaret commands a French naval vessel patrolling the Greek archipelago during the final years of the Greek War of Independence. His mission: suppress piracy in waters where the line between patriot and criminal has dissolved into chaos. The Ottoman Empire is collapsing. European powers maneuver for advantage. And across the islands, Greeks fight desperately for freedom after four centuries of Turkish rule.

When d'Albaret encounters Hadjine Elizundo, a mysterious Greek woman aboard a captured vessel, he finds himself drawn into conflicts far more dangerous than naval warfare. Hadjine seeks vengeance against Nicholas Starkos, a Greek renegade whose betrayals have brought devastation to her family and her people. As their paths intertwine, d'Albaret must navigate between his orders from the French admiralty, his growing feelings for Hadjine, and his sympathy for the Greek cause.

From the burning fortresses of island strongholds to desperate naval battles in the Aegean's treacherous waters, from political intrigue in European capitals to the intimate dramas of divided loyalties, the story sweeps across a region where ancient history collides with revolutionary fervor.

The novel portrays the Greek struggle for independence with sympathy while acknowledging the war's brutality and moral ambiguities. Verne's meticulous research brings the Aegean world to vivid life: the islands' stark beauty, the naval tactics of the era, the cultural crosscurrents where Greek, Turkish, and European civilizations met and clashed.

From the author of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea—a stirring tale of war, love, and the fight for freedom in the burning islands of Greece.

Sobre este libro

This audiobook is narrated by an AI Voice. The Aegean, 1827. Greece burns for independence—and one French officer is caught between duty, justice, and impossible love.

Lieutenant Henry d'Albaret commands a French naval vessel patrolling the Greek archipelago during the final years of the Greek War of Independence. His mission: suppress piracy in waters where the line between patriot and criminal has dissolved into chaos. The Ottoman Empire is collapsing. European powers maneuver for advantage. And across the islands, Greeks fight desperately for freedom after four centuries of Turkish rule.

When d'Albaret encounters Hadjine Elizundo, a mysterious Greek woman aboard a captured vessel, he finds himself drawn into conflicts far more dangerous than naval warfare. Hadjine seeks vengeance against Nicholas Starkos, a Greek renegade whose betrayals have brought devastation to her family and her people. As their paths intertwine, d'Albaret must navigate between his orders from the French admiralty, his growing feelings for Hadjine, and his sympathy for the Greek cause.

From the burning fortresses of island strongholds to desperate naval battles in the Aegean's treacherous waters, from political intrigue in European capitals to the intimate dramas of divided loyalties, the story sweeps across a region where ancient history collides with revolutionary fervor.

The novel portrays the Greek struggle for independence with sympathy while acknowledging the war's brutality and moral ambiguities. Verne's meticulous research brings the Aegean world to vivid life: the islands' stark beauty, the naval tactics of the era, the cultural crosscurrents where Greek, Turkish, and European civilizations met and clashed.

From the author of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea—a stirring tale of war, love, and the fight for freedom in the burning islands of Greece.

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