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A Furnace Afloat: The Wreck of the Hornet and the Harrowing 4,300-mile Voyage of Its Survivors
 
 
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A Furnace Afloat: The Wreck of the Hornet and the Harrowing 4,300-mile Voyage of Its Survivors [Hardcover]

Joe Jackson (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 30, 2003

In the tradition of Nathaniel Philbrick's bestselling In the Heart of the Sea, Joe Jackson's A Furnace Afloat tells of the American clipper ship Hornet, which went down in flames, casting its crew adrift for forty-three days on the open ocean. Along with the stories of the Bounty and the whaleship Essex, the Hornet disaster was once one of the country's most infamous naval disasters.

Over the years, a handful of famous shipwrecks have become symbols of something greater, their accounts a floating opera of sudden disaster, wasted life, and privations endured by survivors. One of these was the 1866 saga of the clipper ship Hornet, the crew of which barely survived for six weeks on ten days' worth of rations and shoe leather, drifting 4,300 miles in a single lifeboat as they all slowly weakened and became delirious or mad.

The American clipper ship Hornet left her homeport of New York City on January 15, 1866, and embarked on what was considered a routine voyage to San Francisco around Cape Horn. She enjoyed an exceptionally smooth passage until the morning of May 3, when the ship ghosted gently a thousand miles west of the Galápagos Islands. On that day, the first mate went below to draw some varnish from a cask and accidentally set the cask afire. Within minutes, the entire ship was engulfed.

The ship's company of thirty-one men escaped into three small boats, set adrift under the burning sun of the Pacific Ocean to watch helplessly as the Hornet became a floating bonfire and sank beneath the waves.

The Hornet's complement -- twenty-nine officers and crew, and two aristocratic passengers -- mirrored all the prejudices and nuances of Industrial Age America. Their ordeal was harrowing: half of the Hornet's crew disappeared; the survivors were stalked by sharks and waterspouts, desiccated by heat, driven mad by lack of food and water. Soon the social divisions in the boat erupted into class war.

The crewmen accused the captain of hoarding food, water, and even gold, and they plotted mutiny. Their only salvation was to land on the "American group," a mythical set of islands said to exist somewhere in the Pacific. But the islands never materialized, and with no hope left, the men planned the details of cannibalism. On the day they were to draw straws, they reached Hawaii. By chance, a young, little-known Samuel Langhorne Clemens was in Hawaii. He wrote an account of the voyage that would make the crew famous, and Mark Twain (Clemens' nom de plume) a household name.

Drawing on extensive primary sources, including survivors' diaries and letters, as well as newspaper accounts and Twain's reporting, Jackson has created a gripping narrative of the horrors and triumphs of men against the sea.



Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

On May 3, 1866, the clipper ship Hornet was consumed by fire and sank in the middle of the South Pacific. Thirty-one survivors boarded three tiny lifeboats and began the 4,300-mile voyage to the Hawaiian Islands. Along the way, they faced terrible heat, storms, starvation, treachery, mutiny and the threat of cannibalism. Those who made landfall, six weeks later, became some of the 19th century's most famous castaways. True crime veteran Jackson (Leavenworth Train, etc.) superbly retells the tale, drawing on impressive primary sources. In addition to the journals left by the captain and two passengers, Jackson incorporates interviews with the survivors conducted by a young reporter named Mark Twain, who happened to be in Hawaii at the time. (Twain's articles on the Hornet were picked up by newspapers worldwide and made his reputation, despite a mistaken byline in Harper's of "Mark Swain.") These sources allow Jackson to quote dialogue, sketch characters' thoughts and avoid the speculation that diminishes so many historical narratives. These events are dramatic enough: a thief steals bread-and murder is nearly the result; a seaman sacrifices a water ration to a sick man he fully expects to eat the next day; and mutineers huddle in the stern to plot. Jackson weaves in astute tidbits of history, philosophy and science, explaining why, for example, cannibalism is not a physiologically effective survival tactic. Vividly and sympathetically written, this is a tragic yet triumphant book about the limits of humanity and human endurance.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Samuel Clemens was idling in Hawaii in 1866, his journalistic ambitions reduced to writing local-color stories, when a career-boosting opportunity knocked: 15 emaciated castaways in a longboat staggered ashore with a dramatic tale of survival. In reconstructing it, however, Jackson keeps Clemens' account at arm's length--it imbibed, in his opinion, too much of Victorian presumptions that only authority (the captain), keeping a lid on anarchy (the crew), ensured the men's deliverance. Still, Jackson depicts the crew of the clipper Hornet, which burned and sank, as fractured by class, their differences usually latent but brought into the open by the crises of their physiological and psychological deterioration. From the core sources, diaries of the five-week ordeal by the captain, Josiah Mitchell, and his wealthy passenger, Henry Ferguson, and a postrescue version of the affair by deckhand Fred Clough, Jackson relates the perils endured. Besides chronicling privation, Jackson lifts this disaster history above the shipwreck genre with the quality of his insight into the sufferer's mindsets. An astutely refined narrative. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Free Press; 1st Eng edition (September 30, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 074323037X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743230377
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,642,416 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hornet's Nest, December 1, 2003
By 
Bruce Loveitt (Ogdensburg, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Furnace Afloat: The Wreck of the Hornet and the Harrowing 4,300-mile Voyage of Its Survivors (Hardcover)
This is not just another "men in a lifeboat" book. Joe Jackson tells that part of the story well - the thirst, the hunger, battling the fierce sun and raging storms (and a "demonic" waterspout which seems to chase the lifeboats!), etc. - but the author has bigger fish to fry. Since this was a well-publicized story, he has journals and newspaper reports to draw upon and he can actually, with accuracy, get into the dynamics of what occurred on the lifeboats as time went by and the men started to become desperate: the search for scapegoats, the distrust of foreigners, the division between rich and poor, etc. Although, to my mind, Mr. Jackson pushes the "class warfare" aspects a bit beyond credibility (trying to show that the lifeboats were a sort of social laboratory and were indicators of what was to come in society in the not-too-distant future), it is clear that as the men cracked under pressure there was at least some resentment of "gentlemen" and of those who were perceived as "different." What also makes this book stand apart is Mr. Jackson's clinical attention to detail: what happens (physically and chemically) to the human body when a person goes 6 weeks with insufficient food and water. He also describes, based on memoirs and journals, what happens to the human mind and spirit. Finally, we also learn of Mark Twain's involvement in the tale...he was in Hawaii and he jumped at the chance to cover the story. He was still young and generally unknown at the time, and the stories he wrote and sent back to San Francisco helped to launch his career. The men on the boats are not ciphers. We get to know 5 or 6 of them intimately, which adds to the poignancy of the story. This is an excellent addition to the "shipwreck" genre, and I recommend it highly.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A nailbiting read, December 11, 2003
This review is from: A Furnace Afloat: The Wreck of the Hornet and the Harrowing 4,300-mile Voyage of Its Survivors (Hardcover)
I've been addicted to the adventure/disaster genre, but this is one of the best I've read. Like the Perfect Storm, the author delves into all the details of starving to death, drowning and thirst that make such thrilling reading. Though I was getting a bit light-headed when they started eating leather, I made it through without even eating a snack. The details are what make this book so gripping -- you'll feel like you know them all and that you're in the boat with them. And when they miss islands that looked like they existed but didn't, your heart will break alongside the men's. It's interesting to note that most of the men really couldn't go on to live normal lives after this mishap, but after you're done reading, it won't be hard to see why!
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gripping, Compelling, Not to Be Missed!, July 1, 2004
This review is from: A Furnace Afloat: The Wreck of the Hornet and the Harrowing 4,300-mile Voyage of Its Survivors (Hardcover)
"A Furnace Afloat" written by five-time pulitzer prize nominee Joe Jackson details the "harrowing 4,300-mile voyage of its survivors." Skillfully and intelligently woven into the fabric of Jackson's writing are anecdotes of modern science, physiology and psychology, tying threads between the tragic and testing events of the survivors of the "Hornet" and events of today. For this reason, I recommend "A Furnace Afloat" to all college and university students as mandatory reading, given credit as humanities and social science. This is one of the best writing styles I've ever seen. I dare not spoil the voyage for you; start at the beginning and read this work, don't just skim over it.

Once you are reeled in, the frightening encounters with starvation, madness and the surreal begin to grip your imagination, and you have to remind yourself that this fateful voyage really happened. Makes me glad for what little I have. Now I don't feel so bad for what I don't. These men had life far tougher than any of us will ever have to endure. Forty-three days at sea after the fire, woefully undernourished and short of supplies, the Hornet's survivors as detaild by Mr. Jackson allows us to tap into the unique experiences of the crew and apply that knowledge to our own lives. As Mr. Jackson put it, "...in life, we are all at sea."
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
LATER, WHEN THE HEAT and thirst grew so torturous that his tongue swelled in his mouth; when his skin shriveled black and salt-water boils dotted it like smallpox; when Captain Mitchell complained of hearing strange music and the men in the bow stared at him in hunger; then and only then did Henry Ferguson recall his first glimpse of the Hornet and the drift ice crunching against her sides. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
clipper captains, sail locker, third mate, water cask, second mate, northeast trades
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Fred Clough, San Francisco, Harry Morris, Jimmy Cox, American Group, Peter Smith, Newport News, Sam Hardy, Cape Horn, Sandwich Islands, United States, William Laing, Henry Chisling, John Parr, Mark Twain, Samuel Ferguson, Henry Ferguson, Joe Williams, Thomas Tate, Antonio Possene, New England, Henderson Island, Joe Washington, Neil Turner
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Books on Related Topics (learn more)
 
Around Cape Horn by Charles G. Davis
Two Years Before the Mast by Richard Henry Dana
Selkirk's Island by Diana Souhami
 

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