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Thursday, 1 February 2018

Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania by Erik Larson (2015)



Regular readers will know that Erik Larson is one of my favourite historical novel authors. It is therefore no surprise to learn that I loved this book tremendously. Even if we know from the beginning how it will end, we feel the suspense rise in each chapter and that, to keep you going all the way through 555 pages, is an art, believe me!

May 1st, 1915. As the First World War begins its tenth month, the Lusitania, a luxurious British liner, leaves New York bound for Liverpool. Nearly 2,000 passengers enjoy the modern amenities of this powerful and fast ship nicknamed the “Greyhound of the Seas”. Germany has classified the seas surrounding England as war zones, but the captain, William Thomas Turner, knows the rules prohibiting attacks on civilian ships. Shadowing the liner aboard the German submarine U-20 (Unterseeboot-20), Kapitänleutnant Walther Schwieger, nevertheless decides to ignore these rules. On May 7th, as U-20 and the Lusitania make their way to Liverpool, an array of forces both large and achingly small - hubris, a chance fog, a closely guarded secret and more - all converge to produce one of the great disasters of history. 

Erik Larson enfolds us in an incredible plot with a suffocating atmosphere. He has done tremendous research work to tell us this true story where espionage mixes with sentimental setbacks and the rivalries of decision makers....

I can tell you that I was disgusted by the British leaders who, instead of behaving like noble men, behaved like idiots (to be polite). Instead of using information intercepted from their German enemies to save civilians, they remained in manipulative mode for the sole purpose of forcing the United States to join the war against Germany.

I find that the strength of this book lies in the characters of the story. Here are a few: the captain of the ship Thomas TURNER, an old sea wolf;  US President Woodrow WILSON, in full sentimental turmoil; Alfred VANDERBILT, a millionaire; Edith BOLLING GALT, the second wife of President Wilson; Winston CHURCHILL, already in a position of responsibility; the bookseller Charles LAURIAT who carries a unique manuscript copy of Charles DICKENS’s “A Christmas Carol” of 1843, a treasure; “Dowie”, the ship’s cat mascot, who leaves the ship before it sails...
And let us not forget the one by whom the horror arrives, the Captain of U-20, Walther SCHWIEGER, described by his officers as a handsome man of great culture and kindness.