Describes Project Orca's quest for the gold carried by two World War II wrecks, the Japanese submarine I-52 and the liner SS Aurelia, and shares the author's impressions of life three miles below the surface of the South Atlantic
James Hamilton-Paterson is a British poet, novelist, and one of the most private literary figures of his generation. Educated at Exeter College, Oxford, he began his career as a journalist before emerging as a novelist with a distinctive lyrical style. He gained early recognition for Gerontius, a Whitbread Award-winning novel, and went on to write Ghosts of Manila and America’s Boy, incisive works reflecting his deep engagement with the Philippines. His interests range widely, from history and science to aviation, as seen in Seven-Tenths and Empire of the Clouds. He also received praise for his darkly comic Gerald Samper trilogy. Hamilton-Paterson divides his time between Austria, Italy, and the Philippines and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2023.
Yes, it took a long time for me to finish this book, but that is on me as I was reading several books simultaneously. Not my usual but that and some other things turned it into a slower read for me. It was easy to pick up when I could and gather myself back into the fascinating story. The writing is beautiful. I loved the prose and vocabulary. James used words- sometimes a word or two I needed look up- with wonderful depiction of sights and sound, personalities, scientific underpinnings ( of which I knew little), and was able to pull the story along. Just a fascinating read.
Author has a very dramatic writing style which I enjoyed to tell the true story of the deep see divers events of uncovering 2 ship wrecks lost to the deep blue sea.
James Hamilton-Paterson is an amazing writer (in the sense that you may not notice how good the writing is) and I would recommend anything he does. This concentrates both on the technical details of going three miles under the ocean (wow) and, mostly, on the personalities involved. It's a journal of this particular trip rather than a treatise on the subject.