While this book is very interesting because it was written in 1912, shortly after the, well, wreck and sinking of "Titanic," it's also... Not very good.
The "great descriptive writer" Marshall Everett has passages so long and so over the top, I nearly dropped the book several times I was laughing so hard. And WOW did he not only sanitize but heavily romanticize a lot of what happened on April 14/15, 1912. Above all, we must remember, THERE WAS NO PANIC. I wish I had a buck for every time that phrase was used in the book. Plus he had some rather weird terms for those aboard ("human freight," while somewhat literal, isn't exactly a flattering term for people, and rather coldly minimalizes the fact that they were living, breathing beings), and there were several instances where what he was writing directly conflicted with the testimony/news articles included in the book.
For example? On one page, he's talking about "...o'erburdened lifeboats being lowered with their cargo of women and children, and the cheers of those left on decks echoed off the icebergs around." (Or some ridiculous drivel like that.) A few pages later, he's talking about how many boats were launched pitifully empty, because everyone felt so safe aboard "Titanic" that they didn't want to leave her warmth and lights and music for a tiny boat out on the cold, dark, ice-laden ocean. In another portion, he talks about how organized everything was, and how even though crewmembers had guns, they never had to use them. In at least two other portions of the book, there are passages and testimonies of how gunfire was heard several times.
I suppose some of these errors can be somewhat excused by the fact that this book was written and published in such a rush. Other portions read as if the author was attempting to lessen the impact of just how terrible the disaster was, an attempt not to overdramatize it for the public (even in 1912, there was plenty of that going on, and of course in modern times it's ALL ABOUT THE DRAMA). It's also quite clear how several myths (some of which, sadly, persist to this day) about "Titanic" were born... ("Be British, men, be British" being one of the most noteworthy. And the most important of which is, more lifeboats would NOT have helped the situation. Through a combination of incompetence and lack of cooperation from passengers early on, they didn't even have time to load/launch all they had. Any further lifeboats on board would have gone down with "Titanic.") Some of the "testimony" included runs from the rather sensational to downright unbelievable. (According to one survivor, "Titanic" basically levitated before she sank. Oh boy. Another stated that it was 2 hours before the boats were uncovered and the passengers told to put on their lifebelts. Because yes, it's apparently possible to load and launch all those lifeboats in a mere 20 minutes... [See above point on lifeboats])
And how in the WORLD can you include an entire chapter on W. T. Stead, and NOT talk about the article in which he depicted a White Star Line ship sinking in the Atlantic, and a massive loss of life due to carelessness and lack of lifeboats, years before he sailed and died on "Titanic"? Talk about a missed opportunity... (I mean, it was no "'Futility,' or 'The Wreck of the Titan,'" but it is rather creepy and prescient in its own way, particularly since it was written by a man involved with the ship.)
And on that note, I have a feeling White Star somehow managed to meddle in portions of this book. It skews a little too favorably towards them at times, and of course the second officer's enduring (yet ridiculously untrue) "everything was against us" attitude is echoed here. Quite often, as a matter of fact.
Just remember, kiddies. THERE WAS NO PANIC.
(Except by my blood pressure, as I read this book.)