When the Titanic started sinking, who would make it off alive? The two cousins
who had been so eager to see their first iceberg? The maid who desperately tried
to escape with the baby in her care? The young newlyweds who’d booked passage
despite warnings not to?
One hundred years after that disastrous and
emblematic voyage, Elizabeth Kaye reveals the extraordinary, little-known story
behind one of the first lifeboats to leave the doomed ship.
Told in real
time and in the actual voices of survivors, Kaye’s poignant, pulse-pounding
narrative includes the story of the Countess of Rothes, the wealthiest woman on
the ship, bound for California, where she and her husband planned to start an
orange farm. It was the Countess, dressed in ermine and pearls, who took command
of Lifeboat No. 8, rowing for hours through the black and icy water. In the
words of one of the Titanic’s crew, she was “more of a man than any we have on
board.”
At the heart of Kaye’s tale is a budding romance between the
Countess’s maid, Roberta Maioni, and the Titanic’s valiant wireless operator,
Jack Phillips. While Roberta made it safely onto Lifeboat No. 8, holding nothing
but a photo of Jack she had run back to her cabin to retrieve, he remained on
the ship, where he would send out the world’s first SOS signal. But would it be
received in time to save his life?
Surviving that fateful night in the
North Atlantic was not the end of the saga for those aboard Lifeboat No 8. Kaye
reveals what happened to each passenger and crew member and how the legendary
maritime disaster haunted them forever.
A century later, we’re still
captivated by the Titanic and its passengers. With its skillful use of
survivors’ letters, diaries, and testimonies, “Lifeboat No. 8” adds a dramatic
new chapter to the ongoing story.
I've always been fascinated by the Titanic; actually by any such disaster and the stories of the people involved. It was really quite eerie reading this last night, at the exact moment the "unsinkable" ship hit the iceberg 100 years ago. I read this in a single sitting and it absolutely took my breath away. It only focuses on a handful of the victims but that makes it all the more compelling. I cared about what happened to these people. Which ones survived? Which ones didn't? What did the future hold for the lucky few that made it onto Lifeboat #8?
No comments:
Post a Comment