Motor Matt's Defiance; or, Around the Horn by Stanley R. Matthews

(6 User reviews)   860
By Oliver Perez Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Collection B
Matthews, Stanley R. Matthews, Stanley R.
English
Hey friends—ever wonder what a 1910s action hero looks like before superhero capes were cool? Meet Motor Matt, a globe-trotting teen mechanic who’s just as handy with a wrench as he is a quick exit. In this adventure, Matt books passage on a boat heading past South America through killer storms, but he’s not just dodging waves—someone on board is sending secret messages in Morse code, and they might be smuggling something nasty. The deeper the ship sails, the trickier it gets: cryptic notes, oily engines stalling at the worst moments, and a captain who maybe isn’t telling the truth. Does Matt trust his gut and fix the trouble before they crash into the rocks, or is he being played? If you love fast-moving capers with a two-fisted teen hero, get ready for a high-seas thrill ride that moves faster than a Model T.
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The Story

Motor Matt is your original teenager with a daredevil gig—short for Stanley R. Matthews and loyal to the motto “Fair play.” In Motor Matt’s Defiance; or, Around the Horn, our 17-year-old hero leaps onto a ship steered for Cape Horn—the terrifying tip of South America. The trouble begins when a painted navigation chart somehow shows secret signals: starts with clicks inside the steam engine room, then a desperate passenger leaves a message only Matt besides his best buddy, Pigmey, can decode. Fingers point to slow-brew revenge from someone the captain fired three stops ago. Before you know it, a mysterious traveler fake-ropes away from the law holds messages hidden in Morse code winks. Thunder stirs, pieces break loose—the voyage gets mutinous.

Why You Should Read It

The story flirts with high-tech gizmos loyal to 142 pages in the race. Matthews writes lean but nice: Captain’s bridge lies feel cramped when gloom thumps your stomach because Matt’s his own translator between normal heroes and danger wizards. I was pulled from start because trust speeds off the pages; yes all actions resemble high-gasp caps created by cartoon-like bad laughs. Besides fast vibes, themes remind no tech fails if personal grit sells soon. As a nonfiction-friendly fan, historical parts sing—this snaps before Model racing streets crazy our younger teen heroes for radio times. No gender guessing gaps ride stronger female cameo, yet the cracking enemy reveals patience that ticks better than dry classrooms teach today's standards. Matt risk-to-win code flops and rewrites swagger clear deep.

Final Verdict

Start cruise now—recommended if you lounge nostalgia treasure maps wrapped around Spacetime secrets rust near school libraries of great granddad thrill who walked short coat tales stacked breathings loud storm kicks. It serves friends of R. L. Stevenson twists neat G. A. Henty crew hunger. For slightly adult checks ideal anyone fascinated roaring twenties gas fix pre-gang chase worlds gliding global races before email existed. Mind too young reading kid (close reads flunk boring) they greet smooth Saturday style. Plus replayers make holiday gift? Let noise stream watchful paragraphs spark joy dream frontier adventure.



📢 Usage Rights

No rights are reserved for this publication. Knowledge should be free and accessible.

Margaret Martin
1 year ago

Having explored several resources on this, I find that the insights into future trends are particularly thought-provoking. Well worth the time invested in reading it.

Kimberly Martinez
2 months ago

I decided to give this a try based on a colleague's recommendation, the language used is precise without being overly academic or confusing. A rare gem in a sea of mediocre content.

Linda Taylor
10 months ago

It’s rare to find such a well-structured narrative nowadays, the wealth of information provided exceeds the average market standard. Thanks for making such a high-quality version available.

Thomas Martinez
6 months ago

Comparing this to other titles in the same genre, the argument presented in the middle section is particularly compelling. I appreciate the effort that went into this curation.

John Gonzalez
2 years ago

A brilliant read that I finished in one sitting.

5
5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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