Books
Maas takes arms against a sea of shipwreck books
"Serpico" and "Underboss" author adds to the deluge of tales of watery death
Even though nearly everything he writes seems destined for the bestseller lists, “Serpico” and “Underboss” author Peter Maas once wrote a book that actually tanked. “The Terrible Hours,” the true story of a 1939 marine rescue in the North Atlantic, came out in 1968, but according to Maas, it got lost in the tumult of the assassinations of Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., and the coverage of the Vietnam War. “It sold like 300 copies,” Maas confided to Salon Books. The book will be republished by HarperCollins this October, but it will face another kind of turbulence.
In the next few months, bookstores will be flooded with marine misadventure books, three of which focus on the disastrous Sydney-to-Hobart yachting race last December, in which a storm claimed the lives of seven sailors. McGraw-Hill has just published Rob Mundle’s “Fatal Storm: The Inside Story of the Tragic Sydney-Hobart Race.” Pocket Books, whose “Knockdown: The Harrowing True Account of a Yacht Race Turned Deadly” doesn’t come out until September, has announced that it has produced an e-book version of the book, written by Martin Dugard. Willow Creek Press will publish Kim Leighton’s “A Hard Chance: Terror Under Sail: The Sydney Hobart Race Disaster,” in October. Those who want a complete set of Sydney-Hobart books, however, will have to wait until next year for Wall Street Journal writer Bruce Knecht’s account, to be published by Little, Brown (No title has been announced yet, nor has Salon Books ascertained if it will contain a colon.) These books follow in the wake of Sebastian Junger’s huge hit, “The Perfect Storm: A True Story of Men Against the Sea.”
“I did have Junger’s book in the back of my mind,” Maas said of his suggestion that Harper purchase the rights to his tale of brine and death and republish the title. Maas also said that the popularity of NBC anchor Tom Brokaw’s book, “The Greatest Generation,” and Steven Spielberg’s war epic, “Saving Private Ryan,” gave him the impression that today’s readers would be more enthusiastic than the readers of the ’60s were about World War II-era heroes like Swede Momsen, the protagonist of Maas’ suspenseful yarn.
Momsen spearheaded the effort to rescue the surviving crew members of the Squalus, a submarine that sank off the New England coast. (Momsen, a marine researcher, was famous for inventing the Momsen lung — a piece of scuba-diving equipment that reduces the risk of decompression sickness, or the bends.) “Unlike [Jacques] Cousteau, who was a big self-promoter, Momsen was the real thing,” Maas said. The 69-year-old writer is sure of his book’s success, despite its many competitors. “I think it’s even more scary beneath the surface,” Maas said.
Craig Offman is the New York correspondent for Salon Books. More Craig Offman.
“People Who Eat Darkness”: The disappearing blonde
A true crime story set in Tokyo illuminates the complicated truths behind media cliches
Joji Obara and Lucie Blackman (Credit: Estate of Lucie Jane Blackman) Lucie Blackman, 21, went out for the afternoon in 2000, phoning her roommate and best friend Louise to arrange a meeting later that night. Lucie never showed up, and within a few days she’d become one of those vanished blondes whose fates fuel headlines and hours of speculative media coverage. She was British, a former flight attendant, and she and Louise were living in Tokyo. They were also bar hostesses, a profession with a very specific meaning in Japan, difficult to explain to foreigners and not entirely clear to the Japanese themselves. Lucie both did and didn’t match the classic Missing Blonde profile, and for a while the mystery of what happened to her threatened to lapse into permanent obscurity.
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Laura Miller is a senior writer for Salon. She is the author of "The Magician's Book: A Skeptic's Adventures in Narnia" and has a Web site, magiciansbook.com. More Laura Miller.
Corporate criminals gone wild
The maker of the documentary film "Inside Job" has a new book excoriating Wall Street -- and President Obama
A detail from the cover of "Predator Nation" “Inside Job,” Charles Ferguson’s Oscar-winning documentary film on how government, Wall Street and academia colluded to deliver us the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, made a powerful case that something was very very rotten at the heart of the American political/economic nexus. His follow-up book, “Predator Nation: Corporate Criminals, Political Corruption, and the Hijacking of America,” can be considered the legal brief that dots every “i” and crosses every “t” in his argument. A tightly argued, profusely footnoted and deeply enraged castigation of everyone involved, “Predator Nation” isn’t just a factually unchallengeable account of how Wall Street blew up the global economy. It’s a denunciation, a call for justice and a warning: After getting away with the crime of the century, Wall Street still isn’t satisfied.
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Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. On Twitter, @koxinga21. More Andrew Leonard.
Can you identify?
Science shows that the only way around some readers' prejudices is to trick them
(Credit: Shutterstock/Salon) The news of recent research documenting how readers identify with the main characters in stories has mostly been taken as confirmation of the value of literary role models. Lisa Libby, an assistant professor at Ohio State University and co-author of a study published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, explained that subjects who read a short story in which the protagonist overcomes obstacles in order to vote were more likely to vote themselves several days later.
The suggestibility of readers isn’t news. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s novel of a sensitive young man destroyed by unrequited love, “The Sorrows of Young Werther,” inspired a rash of suicides by would-be Werthers in the late 1700s. Jack Kerouac has launched a thousand road trips. Still, this is part of science’s job: Running empirical tests on common knowledge — if for no other reason than because common knowledge (and common sense) is often wrong.
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Laura Miller is a senior writer for Salon. She is the author of "The Magician's Book: A Skeptic's Adventures in Narnia" and has a Web site, magiciansbook.com. More Laura Miller.
“The Aleppo Codex”: The bizarre history of a precious book
A reporter traces the shadowy fate of the definitive version of the Hebrew Bible
Matti Friedman An ancient and priceless book, a murky history of evasions and coverups, an underground of sinister and possibly violent dealers, a former spy who drops tantalizing hints and a wily 84-year-old millionaire who says stuff like, “The problem with this story is that it could damage your health”: Are these the ingredients for a cheesy, improbable historical thriller? Yet “The Aleppo Codex,” Matti Friedman’s account of his attempts to learn the history of one of the world’s most precious books, sports all of these assets, and it’s nonfiction. If reporting this story damaged Friedman’s health, it probably happened when he realized what he’d stumbled into and his reporter’s heart started beating in doubletime.
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Laura Miller is a senior writer for Salon. She is the author of "The Magician's Book: A Skeptic's Adventures in Narnia" and has a Web site, magiciansbook.com. More Laura Miller.
Augusten Burroughs: Conquer trauma by letting it go
Salon exclusive: The best-selling memoirist says past horrors haunt us because we think about them too much. Stop
Augusten Burroughs Many people continue to feel influenced and even controlled by the things that happened to them a long time ago. Sometimes, people harbor dark, traumatic memories from childhood. Or fragments of memories — incomplete scenes, uncomfortable feelings, perhaps even a sense of certainty that something specific and terrible happened to them, but little more than this.
Others experienced something traumatic in adulthood that continues to affect them day to day many years later. Maybe an assault has left a person afraid to leave their home or enter a particular neighborhood.
Continue Reading CloseAugusten Burroughs' many books include "Runnning With Scissors," "Dry," "Sellevision," "Magical Thinking" and "Possible Side Effects." His latest book is "This Is How." More Augusten Burroughs.
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