Skip to main content
The Morning Star Shop
Lewis folds love, war and politics in a memorably epic embrace

My Beautiful Imperial
by Rhiannon Lewis
(Victorina Press, £9.99)

“A FRAMED set of etchings and an old photograph album were almost all I had to go on when I began my research 20 years ago. Once I started, I was hooked. At every turn, the story became more incredible,” Rhiannon Lewis says in her epilogue to this novel, based on real people and events.

And what a story she's written. It tells of David Jefferson Davis, “Davy,”  a young farmer living in rural Wales in the 1860s whose family life is suddenly torn apart by a tragic incident involving the death of his little sister Elen for which he is mistakenly blamed.

Forced to leave home and following in the steps of his father and grandfather before him, Davy embarks on a career at sea that eventually takes him all over the world.

Through hard work, persistence and his desire to command people, Davy manages to gain the captaincy of the Imperial, built in Birkenhead, and considered one the finest mailboats of its time.

Aboard the mighty ship, Davy travels to Chile in the 1890s and, without warning, suddenly becomes embroiled in the bloody Chilean civil war, during which the majority of ships deserted president Jose Manuel Balmaceda’s navy.

The British vessel takes part in the dangerous task of loading and transporting thousands of Chilean government troops, as well as horses and ammunition, while attempting to evade the constant attacks of the rebels’ ships in pursuit.

My Beautiful Imperial is a wonderfully epic story of friendship, unfulfilled love, human tragedy, war and Latin American politics that grips from the very beginning. It's an exhilarating journey from the poorest parts of rural Wales to the Houses of Parliament at the height of imperialist Victorian London, from Australia as a new immigrant destination to Buenos Aires, from the perils of crossing the Andes to busy Valparaiso harbour and beyond.

The book is based on actual events that tore Chile apart at the end of the 19th century and were in part fuelled by British colonialism and the influence of powerful economic interests in London attempting to keep a grip on the lucrative trade in nitrates.

It vividly recounts the adventures at sea of Lewis’s great-great uncle yet also manages to skilfully interweave a narration of the social lives of poor farmers living around the Cardigan Bay area of Wales, the change and improvement in women’s rights and the complexities of Chilean politics at the turn of the century.

This exciting debut from a highly promising author finds a happy counterpart in a new small independent publisher founded by the Chilean poet, activist and academic Consuelo Rivera Fuentes.

A must-read.

 

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
latinx
Books / 3 June 2025
3 June 2025

Novels by Cuban Carlos Manuel Alvarez and Argentinean Andres Tacsir, a political novella in verse by Uruguayan Mario Benedetti, and a trilogy of poetry books by Mexican cult poet Bruno Dario

boix
Letters from Latin America / 20 May 2025
20 May 2025

LEO BOIX introduces a bold novel by Mapuche writer Daniela Catrileo, a raw memoir from Cuban-Russian author Anna Lidia Vega Serova, and powerful poetry by Mexican Juana Adcock

boix
Letters from Latin America / 6 May 2025
6 May 2025

A novel by Argentinian Jorge Consiglio, a personal dictionary by Uruguayan Ida Vitale, and poetry by Mexican Homero Aridjis

Letters from Latin America / 7 April 2025
7 April 2025
Travelogue/reportage by Argentinean Maria Sonia Cristoff, and poetry by Peruvian Gaston Fernandez and Puerto Rican Cristina Perez Diaz
Similar stories
CS Lewis in 1947 [Pic: Scan of photograph by Arthur Strong]
Features / 28 April 2025
28 April 2025

After a ruinous run at Tolkien, the streaming platforms are moving on to Narnia — a naff mix of religious allegory, colonial attitudes, and thinly veiled prejudices that is beyond rescuing, writes STEPHEN ARNELL

Best of 2024: Letters from Latin America / 6 December 2024
6 December 2024
LEO BOIX selects the best books of fiction, poetry, and non-fiction written by Latinx and Latin American authors published this year
PERMA-TOURING TROUBADOUR: Jeffrey Lewis plays The Crescent,
Gig review / 4 September 2024
4 September 2024
JAMES WALSH happily capitulates to a master of DIY depression and despair
Culture / 2 September 2024
2 September 2024
James Brandon Lewis Quartet, Art Tatum Trio and Kevin Figes