From the national bestselling author of "The Food Explorer" a look at the famous ship as a cultural icon.
What The Reviewers Say
Mark Knoblauch,
Booklist
Stone looks at the iconic maritime tragedy in a new light, focusing not on the personalities who died or survived but on the abyssal dwelling place of the Titanic’s remains, and reconstructs what likely happened to the ship as it sank. Stone situates all this in the context of shipwrecks in general, noting the astonishing statistic that the Titanic is but one of some three million vessels now resting beneath the waves. He immerses readers in the science of shipwrecks and the actual effects on materials that make the inexorable dive to the seafloor.
Laura Hiatt,
Library Journal
Stone’s book is an interesting intersection of science and psychology as he traces the history of the Titanic, and our continual fascination with it, after its sinking. Although centered around that most famous of wrecks, Stone enlarges his view to encompass other famous wrecks and the obsessions, and subsequent actions they create in the hearts of (by and large) men. The details are exquisite, the science is insightful and the personalities of the men who seek, and even claim, shipwrecks is over-the-top entertaining.
Kirkus
Though the author focuses on the Titanic, he writes about other maritime tragedies and maritime-related science, including hypothermia, what to do if you find yourself on a sinking ship, how sound travels underwater, disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle, and the effects of water pressure on the lungs. From the beginning of the narrative, Stone effectively draws readers in with his own great storytelling skills.