The Deep Silence
by Douglas Reeman
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March 1967: HMS Temeraire is Britain's latest and most advanced nuclear submarine. But when the Temeraire's trials are cut short and she is ordered to the Far East to reinforce the British fleet against a threat from Red China, Captain David Jermain knows that this is no routine exercise in flag-waving. And once in Asian waters, he and his submarine find themselves involved in a hidden, undeclared conflict beneath the sea. While the politicians on land haggle over a situation that could hold show more the seeds of a full-scale war, Commander Jermain must keep his faith in himself and in his new ship's potential—even when ordered to take the Temeraire to the edge of a catastrophe.. show less
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One should not start a review on a personal note, but there it is. When reading this, I was struck by the notion, an alienating one that is, of feeling rather at odds with the author portraying the Chinese as enemies. Apart from that, Reeman delivers solid reading material that appeals to mostly males, I presume. It is an almost all-male show. This being said, there is a brief “interaction” between the protagonist, the captain of a nuclear submarine and a woman. Romantic brevity is to be expected for we all know that Reeman’s various captains reserve their true love for the large, thick-hulled military vessels they command. So, this is old school type British Royal Navy yarn of royal officers, bound by duty, making decisions show more larger than life itself, of sacrifices asked for and made by a crew that has is as foul-mouthed as it is daring and loyal? Well, fortunately, it is a helluva lot more complicated than that. There is the captain who is at odds with a WW2 relic of an admiral that he can’t avoid. There is a problematic father-son relationship with said admiral and one of the crew of the captains boat, then we have a hard as nails, at time even devious lone wolf first officer that is called Wolf, obviously not by accident. Last but not least, there is a murder kept secret at all costs. It all makes for an explosive mixture of circumstance on the HMS "Temeraire" the latest, most advanced nuclear submarine the Brits have of the imaginary “Polaris class” (Polaris is a nuclear missile, not a class of submarine – maybe I misheard …)To add to her troubles, as she hadn’t quite enough already, she is ordered north of the Yellow Sea, in a disputed area situated between 山东 province and North Korea to reinforce the fleet against a threat, perceived or not, from China.
All in all, the Silent Deep is a solid enough novel, even if it makes out the Chinese as “baddies”. But this is about writing not certain choices the author makes. And the author knows how to produce a good plot, characters and all. So, if you like the setting of sea and submarines, if you dig the navy and life on a ship, ahem.. boat, then give this a try. show less
All in all, the Silent Deep is a solid enough novel, even if it makes out the Chinese as “baddies”. But this is about writing not certain choices the author makes. And the author knows how to produce a good plot, characters and all. So, if you like the setting of sea and submarines, if you dig the navy and life on a ship, ahem.. boat, then give this a try. show less
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125+ Works 14,248 Members
Douglas Reeman was born in 1924 in Thames Ditton, Surrey, England. At the the beginning of World War II, he joined the Royal Navy age of 16. His naval experiences have been major influences on his works. Reeman is regarded as the master of sea stories. In 1958, his first novel, A Prayer for the Ship was published. Under the pseudonym, Alexander show more Kent, he wrote over 20 novels including the best-selling Richard Bolitho novels. Under his real name, he has written over 30 novels including the Royal Marines Saga. His works as Kent and Reeman are published in 14 languages around the world. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Ullstein Buch (24639)
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Deep Silence
- Original title
- The Deep Silence
- Original publication date
- 1967
- Epigraph
- [None]
- Dedication
- [None]
- First words
- The bleak waters of the Gareloch were speckled with countless tiny whitecaps as the stidd south-westerly wind bore up from the Firth of Clyde and flattened the gorse of the distant hills like wet fur.
Classifications
- Genres
- Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Historical Fiction
- DDC/MDS
- 823.914 — Literature & rhetoric English & Old English literatures English fiction 1900- 1901-1999 1945-1999
- LCC
- PZ4 .R328 — Language and Literature Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction in English
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 125
- Popularity
- 260,868
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (3.57)
- Languages
- English, German
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 23
- ASINs
- 10



























































