Reviews

Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania by Erik Larson

ammonfh's review against another edition

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dark emotional informative reflective sad medium-paced

4.75

kellyrenea's review against another edition

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4.0

Really loved this book but I felt like Larson spent too much time on certain side stories (President Wilson’s new romance) and not enough time on the main topics - the sinking of the Lusitania.

tboren's review against another edition

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adventurous dark informative tense medium-paced

5.0

retswerb's review against another edition

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adventurous sad tense medium-paced

4.0

Book 2 of three of my Erik Larson binge, review after the fact.

Larson's style is engaging and he does a great job of personalizing big stories like this. 

aurorakretsch's review against another edition

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sad slow-paced

4.0

I liked this a lot more than the last one I read by him. The two stories made a lot of sense connected together. I learned a lot about the Lusitania that I wasn’t fully aware of and it was really sad. but I really appreciated all of the knowledge.

eiridium's review against another edition

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3.0

I didn't rate 'Dead Wake' too highly. That is not to say that you will not enjoy this novel.

If you have read any previous work by Erik Larson you will be familiar with the author's style and 'Dead Wake' stays to the course. My expectations were high in anticipation of a new Larson novel.

'Dead Wake' is well written and presents a relatively balanced coverage of a well known tale. The author delivers on bringing it up to date with the latest findings - bursting mythologies - and introducing a variety of previously disparate story strands. The tact taken - intertwining the shipboard experience with the submarine board experience - is effective and the depth of research evident. The quality of storytelling is consistently Larson. Readable, engaging and certainly well worth the read.

However, it falls down for me on two counts.

The first is the inclusion of the Wilson storyline. A good additional story, but really tangentially delivered to the central story. Larson always delivers a wonderful smorgasbord of additional facts and embellishments that make for a rich reading experience. Unfortunately to me in this case the Wilson storyline was merely distracting I didn't really see the overall contribution.

The second issue was merely a sense of less than satisfying depth or new revelations. The integration of the ships logs from U-20 alongside the rich collection of passenger recollections made for a very solid - but strangely predictable - novel. Yes, we all know that the torpedo will hit and that the Lusitania will sink very fast and with huge loss of life. This is the same story told well. My expectations may well have been simply raised too high, but in the end there seemed really not that much new, surprising or earth shattering. Maybe I was expecting too much. Having explored the lovely full colour books sharing the wealth of pictures coming from the underwater explorations a decade ago and enjoyed a number of well produced documentaries, I consider myself relatively well informed with Lusitania lore. I appreciate that the author presents a deliberately balanced attempt to rationally explore the available evidence - but it just seems flat. Captain Turner for me is probably one of the most satisfyingly complete characters, but others seem to come up flat.

'The Devil in the White City' set the bar very high for Larson. He is a talented raconteur and researcher. He makes his facts come alive and 'Dead Wake' maintains this consistency, but for me it just didn't quite sparkle as I might have hoped nor did it live up to my perhaps unreasonable expectations that it would take the story to a new dimension. I enjoyed Erik Larson's telling of the tale and as I admit particularly appreciated his depth of research, but I was simply not moved by 'Dead Wake'.

bemgrace's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional informative slow-paced

4.0

leafingthroughlife's review against another edition

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informative reflective medium-paced

4.0

jenmangler's review against another edition

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4.0

The sinking of the Lusitania has always been just a paragraph in a history textbook to me. No longer. Erik Larson has a way of making the past come to life in a way that just sucks me in. Larson really puts you on board the ship, lets you walk the decks and get to know the passengers and crew. I came to care deeply about the people on board the Lusitania, rejoicing when they survived and feeling deeply saddened when they did not. Larson also helps the reader experience the pretty awful experience of being on a German submarine, right down to the smells (oh my God, the smells!).

We tend to think about events like this in terms of larger world events (in this case, WWI). What I appreciate most about this book is that its focus is really on how how this horrible event impacted people: those who survived, the families of those who perished, the families of the missing, the people who cared for the wounded and the dead. This is what often gets lost in history.

mreads379's review against another edition

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slow-paced

4.25