The Darksome Bounds of a Failing World

by Gareth Russell

Hardcover, 2019

Status

Missing

Call number

910.9163

Collections

Publication

William Collins (2019), 512 pages

Description

"A product of Anglo-American capitalism, built by a generation that had never known trauma and was bored by its own prosperity and success, the Titanic set sail into a world that was about to change forever. Modernity was shaking the class system, the Industrial Revolution was creating new kinds of wealth, and revolutionary fervor would lead to The Great War. Exploring the infamous disaster from the perspectives of six of her first-class passengers--a British aristocrat, a celebrated maritime architect, an American railway tycoon and his son, a first-generation American philanthropist, and a silent movie star--The Ship of Dreams uses the ship's creation and her tragic fate as a window into the changing, unsettled world at the end of the Edwardian era. Utilizing previously unpublished sources, deck plans, and surviving artifacts, it disproves many of the most established myths about the Titanic, including the treatment of her third-class passengers, the conspiracies surrounding her construction, and the lives of some of her most famous passengers. As it places the Titanic in the sweep of history, The Ship of Dreams holds a wealth of riches for history lovers, encompassing the birth of the movie industry, the Irish Home Rule crisis, the American Civil War, the escalating wars between the great shipping companies, the technological inventions that changed ship design, changing political relationships across the globe; and the social nuances at play among the ship's passengers. Representing the limitless technological and financial possibilities of its time, The Titanic was also the embodiment of the the splendors and injustices of the Edwardian society, a world as doomed as the infamous ship sailing into dangerous, dark waters"--… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member jetangen4571
maritime, historical-figures, historical-places-events, historical-research, historical-setting, early-20th-century *****

The book is a detailed reminder of the lifestyles of people on both sides of the Atlantic before and after the sinking. I truly geek history, so the intensive research was
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definitely a big plus. It is made more real and more manageable by using only a handful of the glitterati as focus persons. Very interesting whether one is afflicted by Titanic Madness or not. I really enjoyed this different take on a subject peripherally known to most!
I requested and received a free ebook copy from Atria Books via NetGalley. Thank you!
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LibraryThing member Carol420
I've always been interested in the Titanic. My grandfather worked 8 years after it sank, in Belfast in the ship yard where the great...thought to be unsinkable...ship was constructed. I thought I had read and seen every documentary about the fatal voyage until reading Mr. Russell's account. This is
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a fascinating book, Gareth Russell tells the story of the fatal ship’s sole journey through the eyes of six very different first-class passengers, from the Irish engineer Thomas Andrews to early film star Dorothy Gibson. The English Captain was blamed and stood trial for the disaster but the blame really lies with the Swedish radio operator who received, but fail to give the message to the captain who had already retired for the night. You can't try a dead man so history stands in error as of yet today. Don't think I want to take any cruises anytime soon.
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LibraryThing member ethel55
There are a lot of fine details about the background of the noble Rothes family that started the book off very slowly. But then, something clicked and I was hooked into Russell's interesting take on these upper class passengers, the business of moving people across the ocean quickly and how it
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revolved around the end of Edwardian era. By focusing on just a few, he has access to more information,( as more of them survived the sinking), plus the ancestry of the families are more well known. Like many, Walter Lord's A Night to Remember was my intro to Titanic lore and it was fascinating to learn the he corresponded for his own book with the Countess before her death. Really well done non fiction. Not the easiest of reads, but I felt I still learned quite a bit about this disaster.
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LibraryThing member mlhershey
A different telling of the well-known story, highlighted by the social phenomenons of the time. Special detail given to the wealthy, socially prominent passengers -- the back details of their lives is a bit long-winded at the outset but necessary to set the stage. I especially enjoyed the
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delightful narrator, Jenny Funnell.
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LibraryThing member briandrewz
If you think you know everything there is to know about the Titanic and its passengers, you're wrong. That is proved by the fact that this book exists. The author has given us a picture of the doomed liner's first-class passengers, a small handful in particular. I really enjoyed reading about the
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Countess of Rothes. Her story seems to be somewhat glossed over in other volumes. Here, she comes alive and ultimately becomes one of the heroines of the sinking. The story of the ship is told against the backdrop of the social history of the time. It's a unique look at an oft told tale. I couldn't put it down.

Highly recommended.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

2019-11-19

Physical description

464 p.; 6.26 inches

ISBN

0008263167 / 9780008263164

Barcode

91100000180626

DDC/MDS

910.9163
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