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Until The Sea Shall Free Them
Until The Sea Shall Free Them
Oct 21, 2024 10:57 AM

Author:Robert Frump

Until The Sea Shall Free Them

In 1983, the freighter Marine Electric ran into a violent storm off the Eastern Seaboard of the United States. Despite Force 10 conditions and fifty feet waves the crew were unconcerned: the ship had survived worse. But something was wrong, the ship was beginning to break up under them; gradually it began to go down by the head, then to capsize. Within two hours the crew were in the water in a desperate struggle for their lives. Their plight sparked one of the most dramatic air-sea rescues in maritime history.

Only three of the 34 crew survived the night. The ship had sunk due to a serious structural defect. The chief mate Bob Cusick discovered that the owners had lost several other ships in similar circumstances to the Marine Electric, but the sinkings had been covered up. He decided to go after the company and they in turn rounded on him, the sole surviving officer. What follows is an epic and epochal court case that left none of the participants unscarred.

Reviews

This is a spellbinding and eloquent story of tragedy, courage and the triumph of one man determined to see that his shipmates did not die in vain. Frump is a master reporter, and his prose grabs you and doesn't let you go. Until the Sea Shall Free Them is in the finest traditions of literary and investigative journalism

—— Mark Bowden, author of Black Hawk Down

Peter Ackroyd was born to write the biography of London...a brilliant book

—— Sunday Telegraph

It would be no exaggeration to say that Peter Ackroyd's 'biography' of our captial is the book about London

—— A N Wilson , Daily Mail

You will not find a better, more visionary book about a place we take for granted

—— Observer

[London] may be several years old but it remains one of the leading narratives as he cleverly weaves through centuries of history to reveal to us the hundreds of different cities within a city.

—— Fiona Hamilton , The Times

In this outstanding biography of the capital Peter Ackroyd brings the streets alive with tales young and old.

—— Charlotte Vowden , Daily Express

The definitive history of London... a must read for anyone interested in the subject.

—— Gary Kemp , Daily Express

It's this decade's finest work of non-fiction.

—— Jude Rogers , The Word

A fantastically detailed book

—— David Troughton , Daily Express

This superlative study opens the door on the cruelty of the quacks who locked up lost souls

—— Edward Pearce , Independent

Several riveting cases Sarah Wise has unearthed for this fine social history of contested lunacy in the 19th century... Wise has given us a fascinating book that teems with rich archival research. The pictorial sources are an added boon and make for a wonderfully illustrated addition to the history of the 19th century

—— Lisa Appignanesi , Daily Telegraph

Rich, gripping and moving mix of social history, psychiatry and storytelling

—— Your Family Tree

A dark and disturbing investigation...trenchant and disturbing book

—— John Carey , Sunday Times

There is so much to interest and entertain in this book, which is enhanced by over eighty informative illustrations

—— Gillian Tindall , Literary Review

A wonderfully engaging book

—— Jad Adams , Who Do You Think You Are Magazine

Fascinating book (4 stars)

—— Michael Kerrigan , Scotsman

Wise reopens 12 uncontested lunacy cases from the 1800s, meticulously exploring the details of each and recreating the stories with a page-turning eye for a great narrative

—— Independent

Sarah Wise knows how to grab the reader’s attention with phrases that would have done Bulwer-Lytton proud. But the book’s readability does not disguise its scholarship. This is a valuable contribution to our understanding of nineteenth-century

—— Charlotte Moore , Book Oxygen

I thrilled to Sarah Wise’s Inconvenient People, an enthralling study of those who fell foul of Victorian mad-doctors and greedy relatives

—— Philip Hoare , Sunday Telegraph

It makes for a harrowing read, but much of it is also hilarious, and as gripping as the most lurid Victorian melodramatic novel. Yet again, one closes a book with the impression that beneath the polished mahogany surfaces and shimmering silks of Victorian interiors lurked Hell itself

—— A. N. Wilson , Mail on Sunday
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