The Man in the Yellow Raft

by C. S. Forester

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A nostalgic and compelling collection of stories about an American destroyer and the men who served on her during WW II. A brilliant display of the author's special love of the sea and his impressive knowledge of seamanship and advanced naval warfare.

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3 reviews
This collection of stories is set in the Pacific theatre of operations during the Second World War, and most of them feature the American destroyer USS Boon. As one would expect from the author of the Horatio Hornblower stories, these are filled with nautical detail and realistic depictions of crews who are bored for long periods and then galvanized into action. The later stories contained a bit more humour than the earlier ones. A prime example is my favourite story, “USS Cornucopia”. I also liked “Dr. Blanke’s First Command” for the importance it places on having a clear head in an emergency; it’s important to act quickly, but it’s also important to check to make sure you’re acting correctly. A quick but wrong action show more could be deadly.

I would recommend this for people who like short stories about ships and/or about the Second World War. I’d also recommend it to fans of Alistair MacLean.
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½
Forester is terrific at meshing the mechanical workings of a vast machine like a ship at war with the personal motivations and attributes of the characters functioning within it. His descriptions of naval tactics and the ways of the sea are unsurpassed.
Eight short sea stories from a master story teller

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179+ Works 34,590 Members
Born Cecil Louis Troughton Smith on August 27, 1899, in Cairo, Egypt, where his father was a government official, C. S. Forester grew up mainly in England. He was educated at Dulwich College, studying medicine briefly before decidint to become a writer. Forester moved to the United States before the start of World War II, and lived in Berkeley, show more California, until his death in 1966. Although Forester was a journalist, a novelist and a Hollywood scriptwriter, he is probably best known for his historical fiction, particularly the series of novels that feature Horatio Hornblower. The eleven-book series begins with Mr. Midshipmen Hornblower, in which the seventeen-year old Hornblower joins the British navy in 1793, just as the Napoleonic Wars are about to begin. Hornblower's continuing adventures, as well as his advancement to the highest ranks of the navy, are chronicled in further books, including Beat to Quarters, Flying Colours, Commodore Hornblower, Lord Hornblower, The Happy Return, and A Ship of the Line, for which Forester recived the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1939. Several of Forester's novels were made into films, most notably Payment Deferred (his first novel published in 1926), Eagle Squadron, The Commandos (the movie title was The Commandos Strike at Dawn), Captain Horatio Hornblower, Sink the Bismarck!, and The African Queen, starring Katharine Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart. Forester's nonfiction includes The Age of Fighting Sail: The Story of the Naval War of 1812, as well as biographies of Lord Nelson, Napoleon, Josephine, and King Louis XIV. He also wrote an autobiography, Long Before Forty. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Some Editions

Beretta, Mariarosa (Translator)
Stössel, Dietrich (Translator)

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Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.9Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-
LCC
PZ3 .F75956Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction in English

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102
Popularity
315,354
Reviews
3
Rating
(3.80)
Languages
Dutch, English, German, Italian
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
9
ASINs
7