The Ship of Dreams: The Sinking of the Titanic and the End of the Edwardian Era
By (Author) Gareth Russell
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
3rd April 2020
19th March 2020
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Maritime history
305.509182109041
Paperback
464
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 36mm
420g
When the Titanic sank, so did the Edwardian age that created it. In this brilliantly original history, Gareth Russell recasts a tragedy we think we know to explore an era of seismic change.
With new research and previously unseen first-hand accounts, Gareth Russell peers through the most famous portholes in the world to follow six travellers. Amongst them, a Jewish-American immigrant, an American movie star, a member of the British nobility, and a titan of industry. Setting these lives against that of the Titanic, Russell investigates social class, technological advancement, political turmoil and pioneering ambition in an age that swang between folly and brilliance, hubris and triumph.
A dramatic history of human endeavour told through extraordinary, diverse personalities, The Ship of Dreams dispels myth to revive the story of a ship that was to become symbolic of its own doomed era.
Previously published as The Darksome Bounds of a Failing World.
A fascinating look at life during a doomed era Like spending time with an amusing conversationalist aboard what the Edwardians called a ship of dreams Russells social observations are sharp and witty the wider history he presents is packed with interesting details. Times, Book of the Week
Gripping . the attention to detail is astonishing. Sunday Times
Engrossing This masterly reconstruction renders the Titanic story vital again Mail on Sunday
Russell sets out to look at the night through the experiences of six first-class passengers Russell reminds us no one thought the Titanic could sink The belief in the infallibility of bigness is the most striking feature of Russells darksome failing world Daily Telegraph
It is a wonderful, multi-angled view of history and grips the reader as compellingly as a pacey historical or epic movie Russell has written a wonderful book, full of personalities, history but most of all suspense. Independent
Gareth Russell invites us into the first-class staterooms aboard the RMSTitanic and brings to life the Edwardianera and its elitethe exclusive circle of Europeans and Americans who wielded unimaginable wealth and influence on both sides of the Atlantic. Deeply researched and lushly detailed, the book shines new light on both the bygone Golden Age and the iconic tragedy that marked the beginning of its end. Lynn Vincent, #1New York Times bestselling author of Indianapolis
This absorbing account proves that there are many levels to the endless fascination of the Titanic story Gareth Russell skilfully constructs an eloquent and gripping narrative that is essentially a microcosm of the moribund Edwardian class system that would go down with the Titanic and finally be obliterated by war in 1914. Helen Rappaport, author of Four Sisters: The Lost Lives of the Romanov Grand Duchesses
Gareth Russell read Modern History at St Peter's College at the University of Oxford and completed his postgraduate at Queen's University, Belfast with a study of Catherine Howard's household. He has written for the Sunday Times, Tatler and the Irish News and is the author of two novels set in his native Belfast and several books on royal history. He divides his time between Belfast and New York.