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241 pages, Kindle Edition
First published March 13, 2012
After the awkward title page, Mone brings some drama and pathos to a story set in the doomed, shockingly short service life of the sorta not unsinkable Titanic. His North Irish Waters brothers present strongly contrasting characters and generally the writing allows for easy imagining of the players in the mind's eye. Except for Emily - Mone has just the one woman character (except for Harry's mother who has like 4 lines) as he doesn't excel at writing women. The story provides some action and erudition as good and bad guys vie for a first edition of a Francis Bacon book of essays. Technically no one wins but a pretty good yarn gets you there.
On the less glowing side Mone takes a long digression into the younger Waters brother's initial task on the ship - carrying and emptying spittoons. Readers wade through a deluge of word pictures, descriptions and accounts of phlegm - what is looks like, sounds like, what colors it comes in, etc. during this section of the book. Unless Mone is actively trying to appeal to a 10 year old boy demographic with this fixation on such a gross topic, I'm not clear on why so much text about it. While he does provide a some insight into the wonders of this long since dissolved ship, couldn't the saliva part be replaced with a little more of that?
In short, not a bad book for as far as it goes other than the bogies.