Book Details:
Pages: 320
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by: Lawrence Beesley,
Archibald Gracie,
Commander Charles Lightoller
and Harold Bride
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ISBN: 0-486-20610-6
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"The Story of Titanic As Told By It's
Survivors"
This invaluable book collects some of the first-published first-person
accounts of the tragedy, described in old-fashioned prose and enhanced by
photographs and illustrations redolent of Edwardian society, with captions
such as "Ladies and gentlemen in riding habit exercised on mechanical
horses and camels in the ship's gymnasium." Some of the social attitudes
of the day are preserved to often startling effect: the habits of obedience
of "the Teutonic race" are repeatedly praised, and one brave Titanic
officer used what the book's introduction terms "the strange ethical
algebra which decided that one female, travelling first class, deserved
life some six times as much as one male, travelling third class." Yet
it's just such period detail that makes this book so compelling--not to
mention the vivid sense that the passengers just didn't get it, even while
disaster was upon them. "To illustrate further how little danger was
apprehended," writes survivor Lawrence Beesley, "when it was discovered
... that the forward lower deck was covered with small ice, snowballing
matches were arranged for the following morning.... The cries of drowning
people after the Titanic gave the final plunge were a thunderbolt to us."
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