 |
The Ship and the Storm by Jim Carrier
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Jim Carrier Edition: Hardcover Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2000-10-16 ISBN: 007135526X Number of pages: 288 Publisher: International Marine
Book Reviews of The Ship and the StormBook Review: Hurricane Mitch and the Fantome Summary: 5 Stars
Jim Carrier tells the story of The Ship and the Storm by using crew accounts, passenger interviews, surviving crew relatives and official weather related records.
Anchored in the quiet waters of the Bay at Omoa, Honduras passengers excitedly board the Windjammer Cruise Ship Fantome. Feted with the finest cuisine and free flowing rum swizzle the fun and excitement is just beginning as the tall ship prepares to sail from one tropical paradise to another.
Two mornings later as the Fantomes' guests finished their Bloody Mary and sticky bun breakfast a weather station on the West Coast of Africa was recording a drop in the barometric pressure. The Miami Hurricane Center labeled the system #46 and indicated in the margin that it was impressive.
One week later on the evening of October 17, 1998 while Fantome passengers partied tropical wave 46 was moving west past Barbados in the Windward Islands. A day later the National Hurricane Center predicts that tropical wave 46 will become a hurricane.
October 21st the day Fantome arrived at the island of Guanaja and Fantome passengers were still enjoying their cruise vacation. But change came the next morning and Captain Guyan March advises crew and passengers about the storm.
BULLETIN: 5AM EDT SAT OCT 24, 1998. MITCH STRENGTHENS RAPIDLY INTO A HURRICANE
Storm tracks in the direction of Cuba and the Cayman Islands and forecasters are calling Mitch a potentially dangerous hurricane.
Fantome was at Omoa, Honduras where locals advised Captain March to drop both anchors and stay in port. March consults his boss in Miami by phone and following a prolonged discussion with Windjammer Headquarters in Miami it was decided to cancel the Fantomes' cruise. Passenger safety was uppermost in their minds and they discharged the passengers at Belize City. They didn't consider Belize a safe harbor to ride out the storm so Fantome with 31 crewmembers aboard left Belize to try and outmaneuver the storm.
Hurricane Mitch was coming up on Swan Island and conventional wisdom as well as the National Hurricane Centers computer models predicts that the storm will turn to the northwest. Fantome headed southeast from Belize toward the Bay Islands north of Honduras and had the storm tracked to the northwest as was expected there would have been plenty of separation between the ship and the storm. But the monster storm called Mitch with a mind of its own defied convention and turned south where it continued to spin its Category 4 and sometimes 5 winds over the waters and islands destroying everything in it's path. High winds and waves produced by the storm extended out some 200 miles from its center. Fantomes' engines and Captain March's skilled seamanship was no match for the tall waves and winds produced by Hurricane Mitch. Eventually the powerful waves broadside Fantome and breach the ships watertight bulkheads.
The story of The Ship and the Storm is tragically compelling.
Tom Barnes, author of `Doc Holliday's Road to Tombstone,' `The Goring Collection,' `The Hurricane Hunters and Lost in the Bermuda Triangle.'
Summary of The Ship and the Storm"Utterly compulsive and unputdownable--the most exciting, authentic, and humanly moving of all the recent Storm books. Brilliantly paced and perfectly balanced. . . . Carrier is a marvelously trustworthy narrator. . . . A terrific book."--Jonathan Raban, author of Passage to Juneau: A Sea and Its Meanings and Bad Land: An American Romance "A wonderful story. An extremely well-written account of the events as I knew them. I commend Jim Carrier for a magnificent job."--Jerry D. Jarrell, Director, National Hurricane Center In October 1998, the majestic schooner Fantome came face-to-face with one of the most savage storms in Atlantic history. The last days of the Fantome are reconstructed in vivid and heartbreaking detail through Jim Carrier's extensive research and hundreds of personal interviews. What emerges is a story of courage, hubris, the agony of command, the weight of lives versus wealth, and the advances of science versus the terrible power and unpredictability of nature. (20001015) In October 1998, a wayward tropical storm blossomed into one of the most powerful hurricanes in modern history. When it finished its devastating course throughout the Caribbean, Hurricane Mitch had killed thousands of people, left hundreds of thousands more homeless, and destroyed whole towns. Journalist Jim Carrier turns up a small but telling incident: the disappearance of a 282-foot schooner called the Fantome. Guided by a young but accomplished English captain and manned by seasoned West Indian sailors, the cruise ship put into port in Belize to discharge its passengers, then set out to sea in an attempt to outrace a storm that, defying expectation, changed its course and in the end sent the Fantome and its crew beneath the waves. All that was terrible enough; added to it was the legal battle that awaited the crew's survivors, one that hung over the disaster "like a poisonous cloud." Following the Fantome's course hour by hour, Carrier covers all aspects of the incident thoroughly and sympathetically. His book makes a compelling companion to Sebastian Junger's The Perfect Storm as a fine reconstruction of a maritime tragedy, one that does honor to the unfortunate dead. --Gregory McNamee
|
 |
Honduras interoceanic railway. Preliminary report. By E. G. Squier ...by Michigan Historical Reprint Series Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library; Published: 2005-12-20; Paperback; BookBest price: $14.99
Confidential U.S. State Department central files: Internal affairs, decimal number 815 and foreign affairs, decimal numbers 715 and 711.15University Publications of America; Published: 1987; Unknown Binding; Book
The House of the Bacabs, Copan, Honduras (Studies in Pre-Columbian Art and Archaeology)Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection; Published: 1989-01-01; Paperback; BookBest price: $7.30Price in other shops: $15.00
Ceramics and Artifacts from Excavations in the Copan Residential Zone (Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology) (Vol 80)by Gordon R. Willey, Richard M. Leventhal, Arthur A. Demarest, William L. Fash Peabody Museum Press; Published: 2004-12-01; Paperback; BookBest price: $69.97Price in other shops: $70.00
Mesoamerica's Ancient Cities: Aerial Views of Precolumbian Ruins in Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, and Hondurasby William M. Ferguson, Richard E. W. Adams Univ Pr of Colorado; Published: 2001-03; Paperback; BookPrice in other shops: $34.95
Maya Indians of Southern Yucatan and Northern British Hondurasby Gann; Thomas W. F. Library Reprints; Published: 2007-09-18; Paperback; BookPrice in other shops: $75.00
A Guide to the Birds of Panama: With Costa Rica, Nicaragua, and Hondurasby Robert S. Ridgely, John A. Gwynne Princeton University Press; Published: 1992-06-15; Paperback; BookBest price: $36.27Price in other shops: $55.00
Scribes, Warriors and Kings: The City of Copan and the Ancient Maya (New Aspects of Antiquity)by William L. Fash Thames & Hudson; Published: 1993-05; Paperback; BookBest price: $14.90Price in other shops: $19.95
The Conquest and Colonization of Honduras, 1502-1550by Robert Stoner Chamberlain Octagon Books; Published: 1967-06; Textbook Binding; Book
Do the Poor Count?: Democratic Institutions and Accountability in a Context of Povertyby Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson Pennsylvania State Univ Pr; Published: 2010-12-17; Hardcover; BookBest price: $69.94Price in other shops: $69.95
|
|