Titanic: Death on the Water (National Archives)
by Tom Bradman
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Description
Fascinating fictional retelling of the events that led to the tragedy of the Titanic, based on documents from the National Archives.A boy works in the dockyard where the Titanic is being built, then gets a job on the ship. As he witnesses a series of mistakes, short-cuts and bad decisions, he becomes more and more worried about what could happen. But he's preoccupied by his rivalry with a fellow ship's boy and doesn't realise the full scale of what's happening until it's too late...
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Member Reviews
Anyone who's read more than a few of my reviews knows that I've conceded that YA is not for me. I usually get really impatient with the emphasis on the I-wonder phase of boy/girl relationships: "I wonder if he likes me." "I wonder if she'll let me hold her hand." "I wonder if it's too soon to ask for a kiss." Or ... eek ... "I wonder if he wants to have sex with me."
Don't get me wrong; I'm not particularly prudish. It's just that, at almost-51, I feel that I've fully explored that level of psycho-social development.
That said, I keep picking up YA books without realizing that's what I've gotten. This is one such. Unlike most others, I actually really liked it, which means it's probably doomed for a real teen audience.
Things I liked:
* show more While a fictional account, it hews closely to actual events. It is, after all, associated with the British National Archives.
* It focuses on the Titanic, not girls on the Titanic, or what the boys were wearning. Sheesh.
* It feels true, somehow. As if this is something that could happen.
So, yeah, if you want to give a kid a book that might encourage him or her to look into a historical event, this would be a good one. If you're looking for the next Harry Potter or Hunger Games, this is almost certainly not it. show less
Don't get me wrong; I'm not particularly prudish. It's just that, at almost-51, I feel that I've fully explored that level of psycho-social development.
That said, I keep picking up YA books without realizing that's what I've gotten. This is one such. Unlike most others, I actually really liked it, which means it's probably doomed for a real teen audience.
Things I liked:
* show more While a fictional account, it hews closely to actual events. It is, after all, associated with the British National Archives.
* It focuses on the Titanic, not girls on the Titanic, or what the boys were wearning. Sheesh.
* It feels true, somehow. As if this is something that could happen.
So, yeah, if you want to give a kid a book that might encourage him or her to look into a historical event, this would be a good one. If you're looking for the next Harry Potter or Hunger Games, this is almost certainly not it. show less
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RMS Titanic -- children's/young adult fiction and non-fiction
69 works; 3 members
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13 Works 45 Members
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- Members
- 6
- Popularity
- 3,040,916
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (4.00)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 3




