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Reviews for Simple Courage The Story of S.s. Flying Enterprise-and One of the Greatest Naval Rescues in ...

 Simple Courage The Story of S.s. Flying Enterprise-and One of the Greatest Naval Rescues in ... magazine reviews

The average rating for Simple Courage The Story of S.s. Flying Enterprise-and One of the Greatest Naval Rescues in ... based on 2 reviews is 5 stars.has a rating of 5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2009-05-01 00:00:00
9was given a rating of 5 stars Wally Majors
Though the American Library Associations listed Frank Delaney's "Simple Courage" as one of the 10 Best Books of the Year, this is a stunning book with no promotion and no machine behind it. And readers are missing something vital and satisfying and directional in that loss. A disaster at sea, the harrowing rescue of passengers and crew, and the courage and plain decent behavior of a sea-captain who stayed with his ship and the merchant marine who joined him on board. This tale of 'doing the right thing' for all the right reasons - professional and personal, contrasts with the movement to glorify and commercialize Captain Carlson. In this age of celebrity endorsements, red carpets and untalented-unearned fame generated by reality television, this story becomes a kind of beacon of truth about how we might all conduct our lives - and stay with out own ships through storms and seas - for no glory but the chance to do it right. Couldn't recommend this more highly.
Review # 2 was written on 2011-02-18 00:00:00
9was given a rating of 5 stars Henry Hernandez
One man. A raging sea. A wounded ship. Life and death. I’d put “Simple Courage” right up there with Caroline Alexander’s “The Endurance; Shackleton’s Legendary Antarctic Expedition” and Sebastian Junger’s “The Perfect Storm,” to name just two. In addition to a terrific non-fiction account, the capper in this one is how well Frank Delaney weaves himself into the story. The events that comprise the core of “Simple Courage,” in fact, are a childhood memory for Delaney and the reporting becomes a both a reporter’s journey and trip down memory lane. “I was nine years old in December 1951; and, if a shade too shrewd for Santa Claus, I believed in everything else: miracles, the power of magnets, haunted houses, the truth of all stories, time travel.” The vast emphasis of the book, however, is on the blow-by-blow account of how one cargo ship “laden with passengers and nearly forty metric tons of cargo” encountered Force 12 winds and was slammed by two rogue waves more than sixty feet high. “Simple Courage” is the story of captain Kurt Carlsen’s extraordinary cool in the face of the storm as he works to save his cargo, his crew and a dozen European emigrants who were using “The Flying Enterprise” as transportation from Hamburg to the New York. The ship was carrying peat moss, a dozen Volkswagen cars, a few tons of birdcages, antiques, early Chippendale chairs, china pitchers, “a small orchestra’s worth of priceless antique musical instruments,” several hundred typewriters and, among other items, 30 tons of the volatile chemical naphthalene. When the storm attacks and the waves whack “The Flying Enterprise,” Carlsen manages to get the people off (in forty-foot seas) to ships that have arrived to help. This section of the book, with passengers jumping into the freezing North Atlantic and swimming to lifeboats, which were hardly secure in the tossing seas, is positively harrowing. And then Carlsen, the last one on board the foundering “Flying Enterprise,” in a move that surprises all who are tracking the ship’s struggles, decides to stay with his wreck and becomes, instantly, the man that the whole world is watching. Delaney writes beautifully throughout his recap of the events in his very matter-of-fact, low-key style. (I “read” this on audio CD and Delaney performs the narration. Delaney has got one of the most engaging story-telling voices I’ve heard, particularly with his gentle Irish lilt. The writing might have been jotted down from a well-rehearsed campfire story.) Delaney is fascinated by words and word origins, in addition to everything else, and the nautical vocabulary gives him plenty of fodder. “Simple Courage” is much more than a book about a shipwreck and the rescue. (Please ignore any other reviews that suggest otherwise.) As Delaney points out, “Simple Courage” is a story that “insists on being told.” Mark Stevens


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