While on vacation in the town of Key West, Florida, journalist Jedwin Smith was bored and exploring one day when he came across the Mel Fisher Treasure Museum. Inside was a collection of coins, jewels, gold bars, and other items salvaged from shipwrecks along the coast of Florida - all of them rescued from the bottom of the ocean by Mel Fisher and his team of divers. During his visit, Smith ran into Fisher himself, and after being introduced (and getting quickly conned by Fisher into donating to the museum as an "investor", Fisher agreed to sit down with Smith and be interviewed about his long career as a treasure hunter. In a matter of hours, Smith was fully hooked, and spent the next few years researching and interviewing Fisher's team.
The main focus of Mel Fisher's diving crew was one particular Spanish galleon - the Nuestra Senora de Atocha,, which was wrecked by a hurricane in 1622 and sank off the coast of Florida, along with its crew of hundreds and its cargo of gold, jewels, and countless other treasures stolen from the New World. The story of Mel Fisher is the story of a decades-long quest to find the wreck of the Atocha, and the treasure that was lost when it was destroyed in the storm. But it's also a deeply personal story - most of Mel Fisher's core crew was made up of his own children and their spouses, all of whom were quite literally risking their lives to find sunken treasure.
It's a great story, especially the details about what it's like to be in the middle of a scattered wreck, sifting through piles of sand until suddenly, you find a single gold coin - and then another one, and another one, and then that leads you to a pile of gold bars, and that leads you to a cannon, still half-hidden by the sand. But obviously it's not all fun and games, and Smith makes sure the readers understand just how long the process of excavating a wreck like the Atocha can be - aside from having to find the damn thing in the first place, you then have to contend with rival dive crews, and even after all of that, Fisher's crew had to get involved in a lengthy legal battle with the US government over the issue of who got to keep the treasure they found. And there was a human cost, as well - Jedwin Smith's narrative spends a lot of time going over the events of one night early in the expedition, when the boat carrying the crew flipped over in the middle of the night, and several people - including Mel Fisher's son and daughter-in-law - were killed.
The only place this book falters is in the narration. Jedwin Smith tends to skip around in the timeline, describing events and then circling back to them several chapters later for no apparent reason, and this makes it really hard to follow the story at times. At one point, Smith goes on a long tangent about how Mel might have actually discovered the wreck of the Atocha several years earlier than he initially claimed, and I could not follow it at all.
Mel Fisher's museum is still up and running, and his legacy still lives on in the active salvage operations being carried out by his children. From the website, it's unclear if they ever found the stern of the Atocha (by the publication date of Fatal Treasure, it- and its rumored vast stores of treasure - was still unaccounted for), but it looks like they're still excavating and restoring items from the wreck. And they're still happy to accept donations.