For nearly two hundred years the Mediterranean lay at the heart of British power overseas and was a key arena for all the major wars Britain has fought. It was also a place where many thousands of Britons chose to settle, their graves now scattered from Gibraltar to Corfu, from Malta to Cyprus. Control of shipping lanes and fortified bases gave Britain a stranglehold over the countries bordering the Mediterranean, which was widely resented but which also protected many regimes, both good and bad. Robert Holland's sweeping new book tells the story of this extraordinary involvement, which has left legacies of language, law and architecture in the most surprising places and which combined the most brutal military colonialism with a romantic enthusiasm for Mediterranean life that endures in various forms today. From Nelson's great victories over the French to El-Alamein and the Malta convoys, the Mediterranean has shaped Britain's own fate as much as Britain has shaped the fate of its colonies and clients there: a mass of very different cultures which found themselves, with greater or lesser willingness and success, cooperating with these strange, arrogant outsiders. While never underplaying the dark side of this history, Blue-Water Empire also celebrates the unique societies created by this relationship, a relationship which, for good or ill, determined the destinies of millions.
Robert Holland Books
Robert Holland has been writing for forty-seven years, and since starting his Books for Boys eleven years ago, he has never had more fun – except when he's fishing. His extensive body of work covers a wide spectrum of genres, including literature for children and young adults, for both boys and girls, as well as adult fiction and non-fiction. Holland's approach to writing is playful and enjoyable, reflected in his engaging storytelling.


Die beiden französischen Autoren Pierre Boileau (1906–1989) und Thomas Narcejac (1908–1998) haben zusammen zahlreiche Kriminalromane verfasst. Ihre nervenzerreißenden Psychothriller haben viele Regisseure zu spannenden Filmen inspiriert, am bekanntesten sind wohl «Die Teuflischen» und sein amerikanisches Remake «Diabolisch» und «Vertigo – Aus dem Reich der Toten», sicher einer der besten Filme von Alfred Hitchcock. Die beiden französischen Autoren Thomas Narcejac (1908–1998) und Pierre Boileau (1906–1989) haben zusammen zahlreiche Kriminalromane verfasst. Ihre nervenzerreißenden Psychothriller haben viele Regisseure zu spannenden Filmen inspiriert, am bekanntesten sind wohl «Die Teuflischen» und sein amerikanisches Remake «Diabolisch» und «Vertigo – Aus dem Reich der Toten», sicher einer der besten Filme von Alfred Hitchcock.