Voyagers of the Titanic: Passengers, Sailors, Shipbuilders, Arist

Voyagers of the Titanic: Passengers, Sailors, Shipbuilders, Arist

3.65 of 5 stars 3.65  ·  rating details  ·  339 ratings  ·  86 reviews
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Published March 6th 2012 by HarperAudio (first published January 1st 2011)
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Mal
Voyagers of the Titanic is a wonderful historical novel loaded with everything you wanted to know about the Titanic and more.

Mr. Davenport-Hines divided this book into three parts. Part One describes the Titanic in whole. Ship owners and ship builders are discussed including the names and details of major players. Technical aspects, design of the ship is also presented. Sailors on board are discussed as well. Part One paints a wonderful picture of shipbuilding and the intricacies behind the scen...more
Kelsey Dangelo
With the passing of the 101st anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic, I read this recently published book. I've read many books about the sinking of the Titanic: fiction and nonfiction, from newspaper accounts to historical perspectives, to those of the investigative committee, to those of the recoverers of the wreck, probably totaling twenty books in all.
This book focuses on the people that voyaged on the maiden journey of the great ship through iceberg laden waters. The book succeeds in it...more
Andy
So this was the other Titanic book I bought the other week, the one I was more interested in reading. I thought I would enjoy it more and though I did, it didn't grip me the way I thought it might. Richard Davenport-Hines brings to life the Titanic through the people, those who built and financed it and the passengers, along with the families and countrymen of the dead.

We follow the journey from conception to build to voyage through the eyes of the many thousands involved. There's a huge amount...more
Gene
The centenary has added many books of interest to Titanic Literature.

The wreck left its mark thoroughly on the society of 100 years ago, and the trauma lives on with us.

This book has a lot on many of the people you don't see as much of in most books about the Titanic. The shipbuilders, crew, third-class passengers. We meet the groups from Cornwall and Lebanon who got short shrift, but some did get their say. In the American investigation, Senator Smith, a lawyer from Michigan who was not knowle...more
Linda
I got this from the library thinking it was a photographic history. Wrong; a chunk of photos but not nearly enough for my taste. But an informative book and worth reading for those of us interested in the topic; though at times it felt like the anti-A Night to Remember by Walter Lord. Most of the people who came off well in Lord’s book suffered a different fate here. In fact, few of the 1st and 2nd glass passengers got much praise from D-H; and he seemed to especially dislike the Americans.

What...more
Terri
Apr 29, 2012 Terri rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: History Buffs
Shelves: non-fiction
I have been fascinated by the Titanic since I was a kid and they sent back the first pictures from the submarine that discovered its final resting place at the bottom of the Atlantic. Not a fan of the Cameron spectacle, I prefer the real life stories and connections that the tragedy created. Davenport-Hines certainly does try to life those connections and stories, but by the end of this 300 page novel it fails, in my opinion.

The book starts out very dry, like many non-fiction books I've attempte...more
Libby
No one not deaf or blind can have missed all the brouhaha about Titanic's Anniversary. It has been 100 years since that great ship went down, taking approximately 1500 souls to rest in the sea. A lot of books have just been published to coincide with the date. So many words, photos, film, etc. Which one should I read? Well alright, lets find the heart of the matter, which of course, is the PEOPLE. They are the story, not tons of steel. This book gives us information, sometimes in their own words...more
Amy
This book was a great disappointment as I had seen reviews praising his research. Those reviews were correct his research is extensive but that is where things end. It apparently, that he didn't know how to pare down his research to write a compelling. This book is more an laundry list of the people on board with snippets of their lives before and sometimes after Titanic. He has divided the book into chapters by classes. The chapter on the first class is the most fleshed out as of we know the mo...more
Sailor Figment
The thing that most impressed me about this book was all the footnotes and sources. The author really did his research; he didn't just rehash what others have said before.

Each chapter focuses on a different group of people: ship owners, ship builders, sailors, crew, 1st, 2nd, and 3rd class passengers. (Also, I thought the character who opens the and closes the book ~no spoiler~ was an eerie touch.) Each chapter gives the background for a number of different people in each category, not just the...more
Kathleen (Kat) Smith
Now that the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic is almost here, I've had the blessed opportunity to be able to review some incredible new books out about the disaster. One such incredible book is called, Voyagers of the Titanic by Richard Davenport-Hines.

In this historical non fiction book, Richard takes the readers some place most books have never gone, in depth into the back stories behind everything you've ever wanted to know regarding the Titanic, those who built her and sailed...more
Alla
“Voyagers of the Titanic” marks the one hundredth anniversary of the Titanic by re-telling the stories of the passengers aboard this ship and the events before, during, and after the sinking.

Part One gives a general overview of the Titanic on land, and the shipowners as well as the shipbuilders that were behind it. Separate sections also follow the sailors, and discuss the boarding and the speed. Part Two follows the Titanic at sea and describes the people on the voyage—the first class, second...more
Jane
The overall effect of this book--or the 100 pages of it I read before deciding there were other books that needed reading and this one wasn't worth the effort--is a bit like reading one of those history articles in the UK's Daily Mail, or maybe our very own Chicago Tribune except that's being a bit unfair to the Trib. Davenport-Hines covers the Titanic passengers from the shipowners down to the lower classes in breezy, anecdotal swathes of purple prose larded with adjectives and sprinkled with f...more
Marie
Voyagers of the Titanic starts slow, but the deliberateness of the author in telling his story thoroughly is worth the wait, until the build-up to the actual sinking of the Titanic. Davenport-Hines chose to profile passengers from First, Second, and Third class, and along with biographic information, he included interesting trivia about each person, such as the various breeds of dogs they had on board. Suffice it to say that First Class passengers possessed wealth and privilege beyond belief, Se...more
Amanda
Like most girls who grew up in the mid-nineties, I have an undying love of all things Titanic. It’s impossible for me to resist a book about it, and I was especially intrigued by the subject matter of this one. I already know enough about the ship itself and the outline of events leading to the sinking; an examination of those who sailed on it as people turned survivors or victims seemed like the perfect complement to my knowledge base. Unfortunately, this book was solid at best and dull and dir...more
Bonnie
With the 100th anniversary of the Titanic's sinking this month/year, there are certain to be scads of books on the subject. I wanted to read just one and picked Voyagers of the Titanic as a recommendation from Entertainment Weekly. A bit dry at times, but overall very good, this book gives details about the people on board the fated ship, from the first class aristocrats to the third class people seeking a better life in America, those who designed and captained the ship and the lowly crew membe...more
Ed Smiley
This was quite an excellent book. It has a great deal of research into the social fabric and conventions and the individual lives of those who were involved, with many telling details, including many individuals that were quite obscure. This provides a telling snapshot of the age; its focus is much more on the world of 1912 than on the details of the accident, although giving a good summary of the event.

Coincidentally, I was working on a "dead sailor from the Titanic" Halloween costume (since th...more
Sarah Smith
Just in time for the 100th anniversary of Titanic's sinking, VOYAGERS OF THE TITANIC is one of the better books about the people on board. Richard Davenport-Hines surrounds familiar figures with unfamiliar background and details that pull together into a riveting story. With a novelist's eye, Davenport-Hines sets his first-class passengers against the new Edwardian craze for speed; shows the ship's roots in the labor violence of Belfast; and sets third-class passengers within the great migration...more
Sharon
A very, very detailed account of those who built, financed and traveled on the Titanic. It was a little dry in places, forcing me to skip forward on occasions but nonetheless a historical account which endevours to clear up misconceptions formed over the years.
Class distinction features heavily and was of course responsible for the large loss of life in 3rd class. An interesting insight into that era, and also into the years following the disaster and the tragedies that befell some of the survi...more
Leslie
Everyone knows the story of the Titanic, the great ocean liner that struck an iceberg while crossing the Atlantic in 1912. When constructed it was thought to be unsinkable, but on that frigid night in the North Atlantic waters, the ship sank in two and a half hours, killing 1,517 of the 2,240 aboard.

Unlike many of the other accounts of the Titanic that focused on the sinking of the ship itself, this book provides the story behind many of the passengers on the ship, the crew and the people who bu...more
Kelly
I was really impressed with the author's research and appreciated the copious end notes and footnotes. There wasn't much here I didn't already know, but I found it refreshing to read an account of the Titantic told from the passengers' and crew's point of view. There is a chapter on each class and I was pleased to see the Second & Third class chapters were a little meatier than the one on First Class.
The author also does a great job of putting what seems to be, to the modern reader, puzzlin...more
Linda Marciniszyn
I'm typically a quick read on any book and unfortunately this book is proving painfully difficult to get through and it's not because I wasn't intetested in the subject matter, I was. But Davenport-Hines has made it difficult fgor me to empathize or even like the poor souls I'm reading about! I would not have guessed prior to beginning to read a book about a tragedy about individuals that looses their lives that I would have difficulty developing remorse when I caame into the subject already fee...more
Linda Lipko
April 14, 2012 will mark the 100th anniversary date of the sinking of the Titanic.

So much has been written, documented and filmed about the Titanic that it would seem difficult to find a new slant. Yet, the author has indeed accomplished this goal.

Rather than spending pages and pages of technical details regarding the building and sinking of the "unsinkable" luxury liner, Davenport-Hines focuses on the lives of those aboard. He gives in depth stories of the first, second and third class passenge...more
Wide
Book Information:
Voyagers of the Titanic:
Passengers, Sailors, Shipbuilders, Aristocrats, and the Worlds They Came From
by Richard Davenport - Hines

Review:
The Titanic fascinates me. A ship believed to be unsinkable falters in the North Atlantic resulting in the deaths of over 1000 people.
Voyagers is what the title suggests, a book loaded with information about who was on the ship. There is lots of background material through out. Of course not everyone is listed, I believe that would be impossi...more
Linda Overstreet
A very insiteful look in the sinking of the Titanic, the people aboard, the fatal night and the circumstances leading up to the collison. Makes those on the Titanic real and breathing, not just a name in history from Captain Edward Smith, to John Astor and his pregnant wife, first officer, William Murdock and second officer Ligrhtroller, to second and third class aboard the ship, even the Unsinkable Molly Brown. Brings to light why so many were still aboard the Titanic when it sank and circumsta...more
Sheila
I liked the layout of the book. I learned a little bit about the people who built, owned, and sailed the Titantic. The first section was about the building of the ship. The second section about the passengers by class and the seamen on her. The last section was about the sinking of her then the aftermath of the survivors, not only those that sailed her but those who had someone on her. The last chapter was the hardest to read because it was the aftermath and what happened to those who sailed the...more
Jennifer Rayment
The Good Stuff

Thoroughly well researched, amazed on how much research was put into this
Incredibly detailed
Gives you a fascinating look into the period of time when the tragedy occurred and especially dealing with class separation
Loved the little back stories he mentions about the passengers - gives you more insight into the time
Really liked how the book was organized into stories based on what class the passengers were on or what their responsibilities were (shipbuilders, first class, second...more
Rebecca
And in this book was a detailed account of every single person who was on the Titanic, especially the 1st and 2nd class passengers. 3rd class gets a little fuzzy and in those classes, I found the minorities the most interesting. Once again, I thought I was interested in the Titanic, but this book is insane! There is so much detail, you can't keep anything straight for more then a page. I also found when they were docking in New York really interesting. It's the small things that were interesting...more
Margo Melville
This book was terrific for details about the time period I am interested in. It is so full of Post-Its the cover is wonked up.
Angela
This book had a few rough chapters, but I liked it overall. The chapters on the actual sinking and the aftermath were excellent. I loved the framing technique of first discussing the formation of the iceberg, and on the last page dealing with where the berg finally melted. But this is a very slow read. It's much more a history than a novel. The book's first 3 chapters, about the backgrounds and lives of the passengers in 1st, 2nd, and 3rd class, almost immediately bog down in minutiae. It seemed...more
Eddy Allen
Late in the night of April 14, 1912, the mighty Titanic, a passenger liner traveling from Southampton, England, to New York City, struck an iceberg four hundred miles south of Newfoundland. Its sinking over the next two and a half hours brought the ship--mythological in name and size--one hundred years of infamy.

Of the 2,240 people aboard the ship, 1,517 perished either by drowning or by freezing to death in the frigid North Atlantic waters. What followed the disaster was tantamount to a worldwi...more
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