Aubrey’s Honour: The Setting of the Sail Audiobook By Sasa Fegic cover art

Aubrey’s Honour: The Setting of the Sail

The Final Voyage of Admiral Jack Aubrey and Dr Stephen Maturin

Virtual Voice Sample

Audible Standard 30-day free trial

Try Standard free
Select 1 audiobook a month from our entire collection of titles.
Yours as long as you’re a member.
Get unlimited access to bingeable podcasts.
Standard auto renews for $8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Aubrey’s Honour: The Setting of the Sail

By: Sasa Fegic
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
Try Standard free

$8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $3.99

Buy for $3.99

Background images

This title uses virtual voice narration

Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
In the long ebb of empire and memory, Aubrey’s Honour charts the final passages of two men who were never merely characters, but forces of nature shaped by war, friendship, and the sea itself.
Told with the grace, gravity, and grit that fans of O’Brian’s world have come to revere, this book does not seek to inflate the legend — it seeks to understand the men beneath it. Admiral Jack Aubrey, once the thunder of the quarterdeck, now stalks the halls of power with a sailor’s unease and a tactician’s eye. Dr. Stephen Maturin, naturalist and spy, walks more quietly, but never without a scalpel in his hand and a secret in his coat pocket.
What unfolds is not a victory lap, but a reckoning: with age, with ghosts, with the corrosive politics of peace. Through fogbound councils, shattered friendships, and remembered battles, Aubrey and Maturin face their final sea — not as heroes in search of glory, but as men in search of meaning.
This is what remains when the sails are furled and the orders grow quiet.
This is the wake — and the way.

The sea does not miss them. But they miss the sea.
It is a simple story, the way good stories are. A story of leaving, and staying. Of friendship without speeches. Of endings that don’t say they’re endings.
It is true. You can feel it in your bones. Like salt. Like wind. Like a ship passing hull-down over the horizon.
Action & Adventure Classics Genre Fiction War & Military Sailing
All stars
Most relevant
The dialogue is nothing like the Patrick O'Brian's characters. Bondin has been mysteriously resurrected from the dead. The storyline is dull and un entertaining. The audiobook is read by a robot, who doesn't even know how to pronounce the names of the characters and fumbles any sort of dialectical challenge. Whatever it is that you want in a sequel to the Unfinished Voyage, I assure you that this is not it.

Not Even Close

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

Apparently this incredibly prolific author has written SEVERAL titles in 2025, some months have a couple publications. I am honestly questioning the sentience.

The AI was a soulless jumble of mispronunciations, lacking of any meter. I couldn't make it past ch 6. I appreciated the attempt, as the original was so fantastic, but this misses the mark entirely.

AI read. AI written? Sasa Fegic ...

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

I went back through and re-listen to this audiobook and it got worse. I didn’t realize at the first listen how much was actually wrong about this book. Originally I gave it 2 stars but now I have to knock it down to 1.

Possible AI: I think this book was written by AI. The mistakes it made and the flow just seem off putting now. I don’t think someone who had respect for Patrick O’Brien and this series would have forgotten that Bonden and Diane were both killed in previous books. Or that Pullings was made a post captain. Even Jacks children were characterized as much younger than they should be at this point. This all leads me to believe this book was written by AI or a very unobservant person who did not read the books.

The audiobook: this was hard. The AI reader was just bad. Mispronunciations were all over the place, even common words. It was also extremely flat. One of the charms of an audiobook is the reader acting out these characters, giving them some life. This did nothing to advance the story or color the characters.

A fundamental misunderstanding

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

The writing completely missed the depth of plot and character of PO’s brilliant series. The only commonality with the original was the names of characters and places, often mispronounced. Flat , one inch deep.

AI reader failed pronunciation of commonly used names and terms

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

I wanted to like this book much better than I did. However, it was very disjointed. There were very little transitions between scenes. It was quite jarring. They were far, far too many chapters. it seemed like the author was writing an outline of a book instead of a polished book. However, he did try to capture the spirit of the characters.

A good attempt?

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

See more reviews