All Hands Down
The True Story of the Soviet Attack on USS Scorpion
فرمت کتاب
audiobook
تاریخ انتشار
2008
Reading Level
9-12
نویسنده
Malcolm Hillgartnerشابک
9781481567299
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
The story of the mysterious disappearance of the USS SCORPION in 1968 finally reveals what happened to the submarine and crew--and why the facts could not be revealed during the Cold War. Malcolm Hillgartner tells the story in a crisp, almost military, style, except when he talks about the submariners' families and their suffering. The author makes painfully clear the reasons they could not be told the true story without compromising national security. Hillgartner walks a fine line between factual recitation of the scattered records of the submarine's disappearance and depicting the dramatic effect of the crew's loss on the women and children waiting at home. Hillgartner makes everyone, especially the women and children, heartbreakingly real. M.S. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
February 11, 2008
Controversy has steadily shadowed the 1968 sinking of the U.S. nuclear submarine Scorpion
. The navy's official version of accidental sinking on a routine mission was challenged by allegations that the Scorpion
was in fact torpedoed while shadowing a Soviet task force. Further rumors indict the spy John Walker for providing confidential codes to the Soviets, enabling them to track the submarine. Yet another account purports that the Soviets destroyed the Scorpion
in retaliation for the sinking of one of their own subs. The two navies eventually called a truce rather than risk further disrupting relations. Sewell, a submarine veteran, and Preisler, a writer of techno-thrillers, add little new evidence in their version of the story; their new data is unfailingly familiar and they never succeed in making a persuasive case for the conspiracy and cover-up they claim occurred. Instead, Sewell and Preisler devote more time to anecdotes about the Scorpion
's crew and their families and little vignettes of the routines on board a nuclear sub. What is undeniably useful is the book's demonstration of the high numbers of accidents between ships and aircrafts that were accepted as routine during much of the Cold War. All Hands Down
highlights a truth no less relevant today: international incidents are in good part constructions mutually agreed upon after the event.
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