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Man Overboard

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Lionel 'Buster' Crabb became renowned during the Second World War for his amazing feats of underwater daring. After the war he was celebrated for embodying a particular English ideal -- a love for King and Country -- that seemed to be dying out. Then, in 1956, during a visit to Britain by Nikita Khrushchev, who had arrived by ship, Commander Crabb disappeared. Some thought he had perished while attempting to inspect the Soviet vessel; others that he had been kidnapped and forced to work for the USSR. Out of this mystery Tim Binding has spun a wondrous piece of fiction. It is the story of a man who has made deep personal sacrifices for the sake of higher ideals and who must, towards the end of his days, measure their meaning and their worth. Praise for Man 'Such an arresting subject for a novel that one wonders why no one ever thought of it before ...Binding fashions a convincing picture of a restless postwar world ...a consistently entertaining and resourceful novel' D J Taylor, Guardian 'His triumph is to have created a marvellous, anachronistic hero in a novel which not only tries to explain a famous mystery, but takes a hard look at what Britain lost when the war was won' Daily Mail 'The dialogue is always a comic delight . ..Man Overboard is one half James Bond story (except more soulful), and one half Ealing Comedy. As such, it is pretty irresistible' Daily Express 'Tim Binding has written a historical novel which with a very light touch dramatizes the faint but inescapable foreignness of the past without turning it into a costume drama; its poignancy is the product of conviction. Binding wields a range of linguistic fire-power often missing from contemporary fiction, as much at ease with the visionary set piece as with bar-room banter ...[Man Overboard] is a remarkable feat of co

256 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2005

11 people want to read

About the author

Tim Binding

25 books10 followers
Novelist Tim Binding was born in Germany in 1947. A former editor at Penguin Books in London, he is a part-time commissioning editor at London publishers Simon & Schuster. He is the author of the novels, In the Kingdom of Air (1993), A Perfect Execution (1996) (shortlisted for the Guardian Fiction Prize), Island Madness (1998), set on Guernsey during the Second World War, and Man Overboard (2005).

He co-wrote a comedy drama series for BBC television in 1998, entitled The Last Salute, working with Simon Nye, creator of the Men Behaving Badly comedy series. On Ilkley Moor: The Story of an English Town (2001), is a memoir and history of the area where he grew up. Anthem, a moving and entertaining story of the horror of war and its consequences, was published in 2003. His latest novel is Sylvie and the Songman (2008) and is illustrated by Angela Barrett.


Tim Binding lives in Kent with his wife and daughter.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Dillwynia Peter.
343 reviews68 followers
May 27, 2013
I'm completely in love with my local library & the way they catalogue books. Fiction & non-fiction are often incorrectly placed & this is especially so in their audiobook section.

So, for the 1st CD, I honestly thought I was listening to an autobiography, but done in a modern, non-linear style. That shows you how good the narrative is. I did enjoy it & once I discovered (thanks Wikipedia) that it was a fictionised account, I sat back to enjoy the ride.

The story is interesting and a jolly ride, but there are two niggling problems. A man who is so patriotic to his country wouldn't allow himself to defect as Crabbe did in this story. No- being a principalled man, it didn't wash for me. The 2nd was the interesting (or was it just me) undertones of homosexuality. He lacks commitment with Pat and Poala & rather likes the youthful bodies of the strong young divers in Venice. I did enjoy that poetic licence.

I have read precises of other Binding novels & think I will try another, & hope they are as light, but enjoyable as this one was.
Profile Image for ricoeurian.
44 reviews
March 9, 2009
An enjoyable novel with historical characters and a light touch. Tim Binding weaves a life of Commander Crabb that sees him alive and well after supposedly disappearing underwater in Portsmouth harbour in the 1950s. It's the start of the Cold War and the end of WW2 in this story, and we flick back, forth and forward to the various slices of Crabb's life more or less smoothly. There are cameos, extended or otherwise, or notorious spies of the era such as Anthony Blunt, and this book could be read in a loose companionship with John Banville's The Untouchable.
162 reviews1 follower
February 1, 2015
This is nicely written. It is not however a "read-in-a-single-glorious-gulp new novel" (The Independent) as is printed on the front cover. It's quite readable without ever being exciting. The part of the novel beyond what it is actually known about the protagonist, Commander Buster Crabb (a real British war hero) is rather sad.
Profile Image for Lisa.
3,810 reviews491 followers
July 25, 2020
Oh, what could be more frustrating than to spend ten hours listening to a spellbinding audiobook, only to have the last CD ruined by sticky fingermarks and scratches so that the twist in the tale remains unknown!

Man Overboard by Tim Binding (who also wrote the excellent Island Madness) is the author’s take on the mysterious disappearance of Lionel Crabb, a hero of World War II for his amazing exploits as a frogman. Crabb is the sort of reckless, feckless man who is not much good at anything in peace time, but brilliant during war, and this story of how he protected British shipping, disabled enemy subs and kept an eye on the murky depths is fascinating in its own right. Postwar he was at a bit of a loose end until he was enlisted into the secret service, inspecting Soviet vessels at home and abroad, and he became known to one and all as the ultimate British patriot. Crusty, conservative, devoted to Queen and Country, and determined to do his bit, no matter how dangerous.

Crabb, however, disappeared during Krushchev’s visit to Portsmouth in 1956, during the Cold War, and no one really knows whether he defected or was captured and kidnapped. Binding weaves a story around this mystery, alternating between Crabb’s memories and his life in a Czech nursing home. What conclusion does the author come to, about the integrity of his hero?

I don’t know! There are excellent reviews of this book at The Independent, and The Guardian, but no spoilers to reveal the end. I shall just have to get hold of a copy of the book!
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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