
Until the Sea Shall Free Them
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Narrado por:
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Luke Smith
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De:
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Robert Frump
The men on the SS Marine Electric sailed into a storm in February 1983 not knowing that they would make history - at a great cost in lives. Just three men survived the wreck of the Marine Electric off the shores of Virginia and they found that their struggle had just begun once they got back to shore. Blamed for the wreck, they fought back and broke a code of silence that had covered up sloppy ship inspections for decades and revealed the flaws in old World War II rust buckets that were still at sea long past their functional lifetime.
A story of adventure at sea and survival in the court systems, Until the Sea Shall Free Them takes on the issues The Perfect Storm presented.
©2000 Doubleday (P)2013 Robert R. Frump, AuthorListeners also enjoyed...




















I loved the book. I read the book twice.
Can't listen to it though.
A great book to read
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Read by Batman?
Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.
The narrator has a strange, over-dramatic, cadence and the depressingly usual trouble with the unfamiliar: "Admiralty" comes out "admirality", "Dominic" is, inexplicably, "Dominique" (most Doms I knew wouldn't like that at all) and "Babineau" is "Babinow". He affects a bizzarre, ostensibly Bostonian, accent for the he crew members and their families, which sounds like a speech impediment.
Nevertheless, this book is the result of a fine and important piece of journalism and will be of substantial interest and worth the annoyance to anyone enamored of ships, mariners, and tales of survival at sea. I am in that category and it certainly made the dishes and the gym go faster for a week.
Interesting, but not a great listen
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Great writing and applicable today
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Hidden gem
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If you have been to sea you won't be overwhelmed by unnecessary description and your mind will complete the picture. The author draws a good balance.
Some of the reviews I read dissed the narrator. But I think it was kind of cool to have the story read by Batman.
There was a song written about the MARINE ELECTRIC disaster called "Take your pay" by Jerry Cronin and sung by Dramtreeo. It, like all of Dramtreeo's work, is a good listen.
Excellent!
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Incredible story well packaged.
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Great story but reader is awful
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Important history well told
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Then there is Luke Smith. Holy crap this guy is horrible to listen to. First of all, he overacts. Each sentence is the one with emphasis. Secondly, he has a forced gravelly tone to sound more intense than he actually is. Its distracting. Its stupid. This book taught me to ALWAYS listen to the free trial before purchase. I wanted to listen to this book after the Brick Immortar YT channel recommended it.
Lastly, Luke Smith has a horrible speech impediment. Though I can't hold it against somebody for having one- you probably shouldn't become AN AUDIOBOOK NARRATOR if you have very inconsistent mastery of "R" and "L".
It comes and goes with such alarming unpredictability that you stop listening to the story and start paying attention to what his stumbling blocks are so you can anticipate and wince in advance. The "ews" and "awhs" are most frequently heard when he does character lines- where the gravelly tone melts away and he tries to sound like a normal person. At first I was blown away that one of the characters had a speech impediment. I thought- "the guy nailed that. Wow. Crazy how the author wrote the book and included the detail of the character having a speech impediment." Then I found out that EVERYBODY has an impediment.
"Where can I stow my gear?" is read as "Wheah can I stoh my geawh?"
Its horrible. I don't think I can finish the book. I'll do it the old fashioned way and read a hard copy myself.
Worst narrator I've ever heawd
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