This book concerns the sinking of the passenger ferry Estonia on September 28th, 1994, en route from Estonia to Sweden. The ferry sank in record time and took many of the passengers with it. Secrecy has surrounded the incident ever since. The author examines the disaster from every possible angle and the book provides a painstaking, no-nonsense analysis of the incident.
The most impressive thing about this book is the level of research that has gone into writing and compiling all of the information. Drew Wilson interviewed dozens of people in authority and read through a minefield of official documents before writing this account. The level of clarity this research brings is evident in his writing. Despite the wealth of information in the book, the investigation is never boring, and the text is laid out well.
The book begins with first-hand accounts from survivors before moving on to a technical analysis examining the actual sinking, complete with diagrams to aid understanding. The book goes on to look at possible explanations, which range from a collision with a Russian submarine to a terrorist bombing. The cover-up surrounding the bodies still trapped inside the wreckage is a particularly controversial point.
This book is well presented with minimal errors in the text. The only negatives are the somewhat generic title and an off-putting cover design; however, readers looking past these will be in for a book that never ceases to ask questions about one of the worst disasters in peacetime history.
This review was first published in Reader's Review magazine.