By piling up a treasure-trove of archival information from Britain and its colonies, Hanna has written one of the most important works on piracy to appear in the last three decades."" - Canadian Journal of History""This book will make an excellent read for popular audiences who are curious about the history of piracy, and it will also be an essential piece of historiography for future historians and researchers."" - Journal of Maritime Research""This work enlarges the understanding of piracy [and] . . . enriches and displays the maritime foundations of the British Empire. . . . Highly recommended."" - Choice""Hanna's engaging book has opened up a rich new chapter in the history of piracy through its emphasis on trade. His excellent contribution will do much to supplement social, labor, and political histories of piracy from below."" - Engish Historical Review""This carefully researched, beautifully written, and exquisitely detailed monograph turns the study of piracy on its head. In contrast to previous scholarship, which has focused on isolated accounts of colorful individuals and their flamboyant behavior, Mark Hanna concentrates on the nexus between land and sea."" - Dian Murray, New West India Guide""Enriched by copious notes that will reward readers with a wealth of data, as well as entertaining and engrossing historiographical context."" - H-Net Reviews""Hanna's well-argued and exhaustively researched book will stand as the critical work on early modern British piracy for some time, but it is also essential reading for anyone interested in the development of the empire."" - William and Mary Quarterly""Ably details the symbiotic relationship between pirates and colonial ports [and] illuminates the differences in perspective between England and her colonies."" - Pirates and Privateers""[An] ambitious investigation into the political role of pirates in shaping colonial British American society in the seventeenth century. . . . A valuable addition to a sparse literature on politics in this period."" - Journal of Southern History