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Excellent nautical tale of a man who survives a storm at sea only to be stranded in the miles of tangled seaweed that makes up the Sargasso Sea. Great psychological writing, with eerie descriptions of the many abandoned vessels the protagonist must explore to get needed supplies.
Interesting little survival novel about a man stuck in the Sargasso Sea. He’s forced to search through the many abandoned ships stranded in the tangled webs of seaweed for supplies while desperately longing to find the outer edge so he can escape the Sargasso Sea.
There’s an area in the north Atlantic where four ocean currents come together and swirl around, so anything trapped in the middle stays there. Right now it’s all plastic debris and garbage, but in the 1800's, it was supposedly the wreckages of abandoned ships, going back three or four hundred years. So the hero of this story, through one misadventure after another, gets trapped in the middle of it all, and hops from one ship to the next, finding moldy skeletons in some, rotten food in some, and in one very ancient wreckage, a vast treasure of gold bars and jewels. He doesn’t take much, since his goal is to get to the outer edge of the whole mess and be rescued, somehow. How he accomplishes this (with the help of a cat he rescues) makes for a terrific story. And thanks to Amazon for making so many of these lesser-known classics available as free Kindle downloads.
I loved this book. The language from the turn of the Century is good fun. My mother had some of that vernacular in her daily speak too. The story telling was much better than some of the light novels I've been reading for research lately.
The author does a good job of making you feel all of the discomforts and fears of the main character. You actually actively wish for his redemption. This story reminds me a little of Dante's inferno; the circles of hell, each containing those with different sins.
I'm not understanding the description as a 'children's book'...? Not by a long shot. I'm now 35% into it. This may be one of the most interesting and well written books I've ever read. Don't miss it.
This book was written in 1898; it is a wonderful descriptive account of being shipwrecked and trapped in the Sargasso Sea. The story flows quite beautifully and I recommend it to young and old.
Told in the first person, a young engineer man is looking for ship that will take him from New York to Loango (someplace in west Africa) to start his new job with palm oil company. Year is probably late 1800s.
He finds a ride on the Golden Hind. While sailing across the Atlantic he learns about sailing and boats. The captain asks him to join the crew. When he replies no, they throw him overboard. Another ship picks him up and gives him time to heal. However, this ship eventually has an emergency and every goes to the rescue boats. He's stuck in the infirmary and can't escape. When he finally does, he's the sole person on the ship and it moors itself to other "dead" ships in the weed-strewn Sargasso Sea.
There are other ships stuck and stranded in this sea. He climbs from one ship to another, some are 200 years old or so. He finds 2 other survivors who die, food on another ship, gold bullions and jewels, and a companion cat. How can he get out of this prison? Thankfully, he is an engineer and he finds a machine shop on one of the ships. Much detail goes into machinery and ship building. Does he and the cat make it out of this deadly sea prison?
This story is similar to Tom Hanks' Castaway: a man left alone but alive and no easy way to civilization. I enjoyed this book.
I found this title while working on a maritime research for a novel. What a treasure! I couldn't put it down. It is about a 23 years old American man's fight and struggle to survive in a sea of wrecked ship from his time to about 300 years earlier, while he was thrown into the Sargasso Sea. Try it!
Great adventure story; reminiscent of Robinson Crusoe.
While there are many dated expressions, one quickly settles in to the style and language. The author has obviously spent considerable time at sea and his description of sailing vessels and early steam powered ships is extensive. The story is unusual, fast-paced and highly entertaining.
On the whole it was interesting. I thought the good thing was the way the story was flowing. I didn’t like the structure or presentation, I couldn’t understand Roman numerals and other language in it.
Our hero may begin this tale being a classic example of TSTL, but he wisens up in time to not only survive extreme circumstances, but indeed to do so in a spectacular show of courage, steadfastness, ingenuity and intelligence. High marks.
PG for attempted murder at sea, slave smuggling, and vivid descriptions of corpses found on derelict ships lost at sea. No sex, no language, mild but not graphic violence.
I thoroughly enjoyed this story and rated it 4 stars. Glad that this book came to my attention. But there are too many fantastical, and predictable, occurances. Probably will not read anything more by this author.