"The nightmarish events of the shipwreck are reported with real power." New York Times Book Review Adrift at sea, your food and water gone, you are slowly starving to death: what would you do to survive? On May 19, 1884, the yacht Mignonette set sail from Southampton, England, bound for Australia. Halfway through the voyage, the crew were beset by a monstrous storm off the coast of West Africa, and the Mignonette was sunk by a massive forty-foot wave. Cast adrift a thousand miles from landfall with no food or water and faced with almost certain death, the captain resorted to a grisly practice common among seamen of the time: the "custom of the sea." While the others watched, the captain killed the weakest of them, the cabin boy, and his body was eaten. In this riveting account of the ordeal of the crew and the sensational trial that followed, Hanson recreates the shocking events that held a nation spellbound. Drawing from newspaper accounts, personal letters, court proceedings, and first-person accounts, he has brilliantly told a tale rife with moral dilemmas.
- ISBN10 0471399779
- ISBN13 9780471399773
- Publish Date 19 February 2001 (first published 15 March 2000)
- Publish Status Out of Stock
- Out of Print 25 July 2011
- Publish Country US
- Imprint John Wiley & Sons Inc
- Format Paperback
- Pages 336
- Language English