New York Times Bestseller In the tradition of Jon Krakauer’s Into Thin Air and Sebastian Junger’s The Perfect Storm comes a true tale of riveting adventure in which two weekend scuba divers risk everything to solve a great historical mystery–and make history themselves. For John Chatterton and Richie Kohler; deep wreck diving was more than a sport. Testing themselves against treacherous currents; braving depths that induced hallucinatory effects; navigating through wreckage as perilous as a minefield; they pushed themselves to their limits and beyond; brushing against death more than once in the rusting hulks of sunken ships. But in the fall of 1991; not even these courageous divers were prepared for what they found 230 feet below the surface; in the frigid Atlantic waters sixty miles off the coast of New Jersey: a World War II German U-boat; its ruined interior a macabre wasteland of twisted metal; tangled wires; and human bones–all buried under decades of accumulated sediment. No identifying marks were visible on the submarine or the few artifacts brought to the surface. No historian; expert; or government had a clue as to which U-boat the men had found. In fact; the official records all agreed that there simply could not be a sunken U-boat and crew at that location. Over the next six years; an elite team of divers embarked on a quest to solve the mystery. Some of them would not live to see its end. Chatterton and Kohler; at first bitter rivals; would be drawn into a friendship that deepened to an almost mystical sense of brotherhood with each other and with the drowned U-boat sailors–former enemies of their country. As the men’s marriages frayed under the pressure of a shared obsession; their dives grew more daring; and each realized that he was hunting more than the identities of a lost U-boat and its nameless crew. Author Robert Kurson’s account of this quest is at once thrilling and emotionally complex; and it is written with a vivid sense of what divers actually experience when they meet the dangers of the ocean’s underworld. The story of Shadow Divers often seems too amazing to be true; but it all happened; two hundred thirty feet down; in the deep blue sea.
#466128 in Books Cooper; William J. 2001-11-13 2001-11-13Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 7.99 x 1.65 x 5.16l; 1.64 #File Name: 0375725423848 pages
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. The one thing I was disappointed in is it never said what happened to Varina ...By Karen OlsonI read this book because I did not know much about Jefferson Davis. The one thing I was disappointed in is it never said what happened to Varina after Jefferson died. I looked it up later. A good incite into Davis and his thinking. It was interesting that he did not give up on winning even after Lee surrendered to Grant.1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Sorting out myth and misinformationBy Emil L. PoseyWhat drove the South to secede? Why would they rise up in arms to combat a nation they professed so passionately to love? A deep question with an answer perhaps easy to verbalize; but certainly difficult to understand. It is also an answer enormous in its scope if you grapple with it in the context of the whole of the South – many people; opinions; and motives – but we can begin to understand if we focus on the mindset of one individual: Jefferson Finis Davis. If anyone personified the Confederate cause; he did.I had only a superficial knowledge of Davis; and essentially viewed him as a traitor to the nation. Then I occasioned upon his great-great grandson; Bertram Hayes-Davis. He speaks and writes often about Davis; and his tag line is that he is misunderstood. I decided to plow into this book to find out.Davis’ motives often don’t get much in-depth analysis in conventional histories of the war. Summarizations are easier. Even those pieces that discuss the Southern perspective may do so with little penetration into issues and positions. William J. Cooper’s book drives right to heart of that question. A professor of history at Louisiana State University; he doesn’t promote Davis’ agenda; but neither does he demonize it.No matter how you approach the topic; one cannot escape the issue of slavery in all its perspectives – its morality; its importance to the South’s economy; its persistence in the South; how it was an integral part of the South’s identity; and so forth.* Nor can it be ignored that the South waged a war of rebellion against the duly constituted government of this nation in what is still its bloodiest conflict. Trying to understand the South’s motivations is an amazing exercise in cause-and-effect contradictions. Campbell expertly weaves this backdrop into the story.* It is true that the war was not started to end or even to maintain slavery; but slavery was the backdrop of all national politics in the US from the Missouri Compromise of 1820 through the end of the war in 1865. It then echoed in national politics down to the present day.First and foremost; Campbell paints for us a portrait about Davis. If his isn’t the definitive biography of the man; it should be a contender for that moniker. It is full of period anecdotes; observations by peers; newspaper columns; and extracts from letters to; from; and about him. It’s also a portrait of the antebellum South through Davis’ experiences; the sectional and national politics of the times; and the Civil War and its immediate aftermath. As for the war itself; the book deals at the national level -- grand strategy; not details of battles and campaigns.It is a thorough portrait that Campbell builds. Davis was born to politics; it was his life’s work. He had a successful plantation (Brierfield) in a bend in the Mississippi River in Warren County; Mississippi; with a full complement of slaves* and the other resources; crops; and related activities of a typical Southern plantation. Beginning in 1840; he often left it to his brother; Joseph; to manage (along with Joseph’s own neighboring plantation; Hurricane); while he spent much of his time engaged in politics. He had a family that he adored; but; again; politics usually came first. He long-suffered of ill health; afflicted by a chronic eye infection as well as a condition known as trigeminal neuralgia. While these were episodic and could be disabling (the neuralgia was extremely painful); they didn’t slow him down much.* Throughout his early army career after graduating West Point; Davis was accompanied by James Pemberton; his personal slave. When Davis got Brierfield up and running; he made Pemberton the plantation overseer. This is telling of Davis’ character; not to mention his confidence in Pemberton; since the overwhelming majority of plantation owners employed whites in this role. Pemberton held it until his death in 1850. Campbell acknowledges that Davis was “a reasonably humane slave masterâ€; but also that he was totally committed to the superiority of the white race and to the institution of slavery (pp. 230-239).Davis was a workaholic; often to the point of exhaustion. He would work long hours and travel regularly despite his recurrent health problems. He paid great attention to detail and had difficulty delegating responsibility; the combination of which caused him to be a micromanager.* These traits were manifest in his political life as well as in his government service. During the Civil War he tended to neglect civil matters in favor of military issues; favored old friends in appointments of cabinet officers and military commands (see pg. 355; for example); and put up with poor performance and relationships among some of his senior officers – his tolerance of Generals Joseph E. Johnson and P.G.T. Beauregard; and his reliance on General Braxton Bragg; for example. (Contrast this with the mutual respect; confidence; and trust between Davis and General Robert E. Lee. Theirs was a relationship solidly grounded.) These and other shortcomings and failures during the war were legion; and are discussed in detail by Campbell.* Davis’ tendency to micromanage was apparent when he was US Secretary of War. It was manifest during the Civil War as well. Take; for example; when General Leonidas Polk violated Kentucky’s neutrality on September 3; 1861; by occupying Columbus; Kentucky. Local politicos were aghast at the implications for the Southern cause in Kentucky and beseeched Davis to order the general’s immediate withdrawal. Davis instructed Secretary of War Leroy Pope Walker to direct General Polk “to retire from Kentucky and to explain his actionsâ€. Before he received Secretary Walker’s instructions; General Polk wired Davis that “military necessity make taking Columbus essentialâ€. Davis accepted this and sent General Polk a countermanding order. (Pp. 356-357.) In fairness; it must be pointed out that Walker was not up to the task of being Secretary of War; which lends credence to Davis bypassing him in this example; but; “From the earliest days in Montgomery; Davis basically acted as his own secretary of war. Considering no matter too trivial for his attention; he did not assign Secretary Walker primary responsibility for any activity. Much correspondence and many directives went out over Walker’s signature; but all the major decisions; and many minor ones; were Davis’s.†(Pg. 354.) This kind of direct involvement was in large part why he went through three Secretaries of War between February 1861 and November 1862.There was a lot to the man. He was an ardent supporter of progress; championing the likes of Manifest Destiny and the establishment of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington; DC. I would have liked more about his time as the US Secretary of War under President Pierce; 1853-1857. Campbell devotes only one chapter; about 35 pages; to this episode in Davis’ life; and even then only briefly touches on the many innovations Davis applied. On the other hand; Campbell provides much detail in his description of state-level politics in the South; particularly Davis’ rise in his home state of Mississippi.Throughout his career; Davis was passionate about states’ rights; and therein is the core of what drove him to the Confederacy. In his first major congressional speech in the US House of Representatives; on February 6; 1846; he said; “To all which has been said of the inherent powers of the Government; I answer; it is the creature of the States; as such it could have no inherent powers; all it preserves was delegated by the States; and it is therefore that our Constitution is not an instrument of limitations; but of grants…[W]hatever was then deemed necessary was specifically conveyed; beyond the power so granted; nothing can now be claimed except those incidents which are indispensable to its existence; not merely convenient or conducive; but subordinate and necessary to the exercise of the grants.†He was quite the orator.With his chronological approach; Campbell provides a thorough; comprehensive journey through Davis’ life and times. As to the question of who Davis really was; the title provides the book’s main theme. As Campbell puts it in his preface; “By 1860; he stood as one of America’s most accomplished political leaders. A superb politician; he dominated his state of Mississippi. As a hero of the Mexican War; as a notable cabinet officer; and as a prominent member of the United States Senate; Jefferson Davis commanded respect across the nation. He was spoken of as a man who could legitimately aspire to his country’s highest office. And he did become president; but not of the United States.†(Pg. xiv.) He believed in the Constitution; and served his country long and well until the Civil War; yet his dedication to states’ rights; first manifested during the Nullification Crisis between South Carolina and the United States government in 1832-33; prevailed. An exercise in contradictions; indeed. Yet; was there a contradiction in these seemingly divided loyalties? Many in the South; including Davis; felt not – they felt clear in their beliefs. Campbell discusses Davis’ views comprehensively and at length; relying in large part on his speeches in public; at party conventions; and in the House and the Senate. Davis always strove to be clear; but he struggled to reconcile all of his points to reality. Contradictions remained. The struggle many; north and south; had in answering that to themselves shows they; too; struggled with the contradictions.Campbell is an accomplished author of Civil War history with several books already to his credit. These include We Have the War upon Us: The Onset of the Civil War; November 1860-April 1861; Liberty and Slavery: Southern Politics to 1860; and The South and the Politics of Slavery; 1828-1856; to name a few. Each of these compliments Jefferson Davis; American quite well.This is a fine resource for those of casual interest about Jefferson Davis and the Civil War as well as those of a more scholarly bent. It is a long book – 658 pages of text; plus extensive end notes – but it is well written; flows smoothly; and is easily read. I highly recommend it.3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Jefferson Davis---A True AmericanBy Paul HossePerhaps few individuals in history; and certainly among Americans; are as equally viled and beloved at the same time as Jefferson Davis. Jefferson Davis; born in Kentucky; just a few miles away from along another great man he would be forever associated with; Abe Lincoln; and grew up in Mississippi. He proclaimed a deep love for his adopted state; the South; with all its traditons and culture; and for America. He was considered one of the great political minds of his time (often compared to another great Southeners; John C. Calhoun) and quite handsome and charming. He was an outstanding Senator and often consider a possible future US President. Yet; it was as President of the Confederate States of America that he would earn his notoriety; an office he didn't want as the result of a series of events he fought against and prayed would never happen (he regarded it as the saddest day" of his life). He was a graduate of West Point; the son of an American Revolutionary hero; and a veteran of the Mexican-American War. He was also a man of deep religious faith.Author William J Cooper Jr did an outstanding job in bringing this tragic American Icon to life with all his charm and flaws. His protrayal of Davis is both balanced and objective; and comes complete with many of the untold stories of his life such his love for those enslaved by him and by a system he privately disliked. Here we get more than just a glimpse of the man; we get a real sense of who he was and; perhaps; what he could have been.At 706 pages including the Epilogue; this is an excellent biography of a grand and fallen man. An excellent read for anyone interested in American History; the Civil War; or US politics; or human psychology.