An American Slave in Barbary blog tour is through The Coffee Pot Book Club and includes an exclusive excerpt. Share, comment, and follow.

Book Details

Larry Kelley
An American Slave in Barbary – The Odyssey of Winston Prescott Jones
Blurb:
An American Slave in Barbary: The Odyssey of Winston Prescott Jones is the story of a
first-generation American student whose commercial ship is captured in the summer of 1801
by Moslem pirates. He spends the next sixteen years as a captive in Algiers. He rises to
become a confidant to the Dey of Algiers, who is desperate to know what made the American
shopkeepers and farmers believe they could defeat the British war machine, and how they
intended to rule themselves.
In the genre created by Homer, it is a tale of suffering, sin, and
redemption, and a young man’s epic journey to regain his freedom.
Buy Link:
Universal Buy Link: https://geni.us/cgYHz
Author Bio:

Larry Kelley’s life was changed by 9/11. He desperately wanted to find out who these people were who attacked us, what ordinary citizens could do to join the battle, and how those plotting to kill us in future attacks could be defeated.
Kelley has written scores of columns on the dangers of Western complacency. In his tenure as a political commentary writer, he has made a significant impact. His feature articles have appeared in the Piedmont Post, the San Francisco Chronicle, Human Events, and Townhall Magazine. Two of his articles were featured on the cover of Townhall Magazine.
His first book, Lessons from Fallen Civilizations, is the result of ten years of research. And received critical praise as a saga that begins on the plain of Marathon in 490 BC and whose main character is Western Civilization.
Author Links:
Website: https://www.larrykelley.com
Twitter / X: https://x.com/KelleyComment
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/larry.kelley.391
Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B007KA66FQ/
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4299143.Larry_Kelley
Excerpt 1:
We were only about thirty leagues from the Straits of Gibraltar. Adjusting the sails and riggings of our twelve-man ketch, Intrepid, we made in the morning of August 2, 1801, seven days after we left Greece, ready our departure from the Mediterranean and entrance into the Atlantic. We were on our return voyage to Boston when our passage was blocked by two Muslim pirate ships. Each was a three-masted xebec, with crews of about one hundred and fourteen cannons. They did not fire their cannons at us, because their aim was to capture our ship intact and our crew alive.
For the rest of the day, our captain, my Uncle Raymond, and his helmsman, Mr. Bagan, desperately attempted to elude the two corsairs that maneuvered about us like huge sharks. While we struggled to keep our two-masted ketch away from our pursuers, a storm gathered from the east. A menacing black cloud descended down to the water.
Captain Raymond shouted from the quarterdeck, “If’n we kin make it into that storm, we kin possibly escape these bastards!”
One of the Muslim corsairs came so close to us we could see the pirates on the larger vessel holding their grappling hooks, readying to fling them at us and pull their boat against ours to board us. During one of these close encounters, our first mate, Mr. Freeman, and the boson, Mr. Leeson, fired their muskets at our pursuers. I saw a pirate take one of the rounds and fall back onto the deck. A group of Muslim gunmen perched on the riggings of the vessel closest to us opened fire, raking our deck with lead shot. One ball hit Mr. Leeson in the neck, killing him instantly.

