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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An incredible story of perseverance and daring!
Keith Jessop's achievement in successfully salvaging the treasure of the HMS Edinburgh parallels that of Tommy Thompson, who found and salvaged the gold from the 1857 wreck of the SS Central America. Jessop's book GOLDFINDER compares favorably to Gary Kinder's book SHIP OF GOLD; both books tell the full story of how the vessels (Edinburgh and Central America,...
Published on September 20, 2001 by Steve Lloyd

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0 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An ok Book
this book was ok its worth reading on a rainy day or in the car.
Published on March 15, 2001


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An incredible story of perseverance and daring!, September 20, 2001
This review is from: Goldfinder: The True Story of $100 Million In Lost Russian Gold -- and One Man's Lifelong Quest to Recover It (Hardcover)
Keith Jessop's achievement in successfully salvaging the treasure of the HMS Edinburgh parallels that of Tommy Thompson, who found and salvaged the gold from the 1857 wreck of the SS Central America. Jessop's book GOLDFINDER compares favorably to Gary Kinder's book SHIP OF GOLD; both books tell the full story of how the vessels (Edinburgh and Central America, respectively) came to grief, and both excel in their descriptions of the background and personal details of the men who would ultimately bring their treasures to the surface.

Jessop's accomplishment is particularly remarkable in that his expedition did not utilize ROVs, but instead relied upon surface-supplied divers who descended more than 800 feet to the bottom of the frigid Barents Sea to penetrate the armored bomb room of the sunken Edinburgh, retrieving her cargo of gold bars while enduring the danger and privations of saturation diving.

Fast-moving and charmingly told, the author brings his unique sense of humor and adventurous spirit to life on every page, resulting in a book that is engaging and fascinating. If you enjoy a grand adventure, and especially if you find interest in tales of shipwreck, diving and marine salvage, don't miss GOLDFINDER!

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Ultimate Rags To Riches Story - A Fantastic Read!, July 9, 2000
This review is from: Goldfinder (Hardcover)
Keith Jessop, the self titled 'ragged-arse scrapman from Keighley', is the man who would eventually recover almost five tons of gold bullion from the British Cruiser HMS Edinburgh, started out his salvage career by removing bronze propellors from various wrecks around the UK coast. He would purchase a wreck, remove the non-ferrous metals, and purchase another wreck with the proceeds. And when the money dried up, he would work on the North Sea oil rigs as a diver, all the while still dreaming of gold, much to the amusement of his colleagues.

By successfully making returns on wrecks previously considered unworkable, he proved himself to the Salvage Association, the body that overseas the awarding of salvage contracts, and eventually found himself in the position of being awarded the contract to recover ten tons of Russian gold from the sunken cruiser Edinburgh.

The highs and lows of this book are awesome, and the final twist(s!) are something that no writer of fiction could have created.

Brilliant, even if sunken warships don't interest you!

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating and captivating all the way through, December 4, 2003
By A Customer
I'm always fascinated with stories of shipwrecks and lost treasure and this book definitely quenches my thirst for both. An amazing story of Keith Jessop's plight in recovering ten tons of Russion gold that went down in the belly of the HMS Edinburg during WWII in the cold Arctic Sea. I especially liked the early part of the book where Keith spends some time giving you the background on how he got started in underwater salvage. I especially enjoyed his insight into some of the legal issues involved in running a salvage operation. Keith takes you through every step of his long journey in planning for and putting together a team of experts to execute and oversee the actual recovery of the gold. The book is full of suspense, as you don't know what will happen next, which inevitably keeps you glued to each turning page. At some times Keith goes into a lot of detail, but this was necessary for the reader to get an appreciation for the levels of frustration he most likely experienced while dealing with the bureaucracy. He also pays tribute to the lost sailors aboard the HMS Edinburg through his heartfelt synopsis of the events that led up to its tragic demise and how his team of professionals handled their uncovered remains. If you like stories of sunken treasure, no matter how big or small, this book has got you covered. You won't be dissapointed. Keith's way of depicting the events was so clear and vivid that at times I swear I could smell salt in the air.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A tale of one seriously determined man, July 17, 2001
This review is from: Goldfinder: The True Story of $100 Million In Lost Russian Gold -- and One Man's Lifelong Quest to Recover It (Hardcover)
I love stories about determination. This book stands out as one of the best I have read in a long time. The author has led a life of salvage diving mostly off the coast of England, but ultimately he went after the mother lode in the deepest, coldest darkest waters of his time. The HMS Edinburgh in the North Atlantic.

He begins his book with scary tales of his first endeavours. Himself and a few buddies with almost no training or education in scuba taking on early salvage operations in leaky Royal Navy surplus wet suits pulling up various non-ferrous metals from forgotten wrecks and taking them to the local scrap dealer for whatever they can get.

Fast forward through many adventures and misadventures in salvage diving and finally the story of how a determined man pulled literally tons of gold buillion of out a ship that was in water too deep for anyone to even think of diving it at the time. More than that, the gold was stored next to room on the ship that was full of live forty year old live bombs.

I loved this book and recommened it to divers and non-divers alike.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars inspirational, October 7, 2002
By 
simon gurney (london United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
an amazing book, Keith Jessops passion of diving and particuliarly wreck salvage, leave indelible memories.
the books balance is great, enough early details to establish his character, the book really picks up pace with the various wreck salvages leading up to the edinburgh, the background and research is well documented, as are the details of setting up expeditions for locating and then salvaging the wrecks.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best marine Archology books I've read, November 11, 2001
By 
Dave Fisherman (Bethpage, ny USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Goldfinder: The True Story of $100 Million In Lost Russian Gold -- and One Man's Lifelong Quest to Recover It (Hardcover)
I wish I found the Gold.
Clive Cussler was right,this was a great Marine Archology book.
It was intresting,how the diver started his carere.I found the History of the Edinburgh very intresteding.One of the best marine Archology books I ever read.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Good Read!, August 31, 2000
This review is from: Goldfinder (Hardcover)
Yup, this book is a pretty good read.

I was in the dive biz for a long time (my wife tells me toooo long), and I bailed out of the offshore scene some 5 years ago. I've got a fair selection of books on Commercial/Offshore Diving and also Salvage Diving and I'm pleased to add Goldfinder to my collection.

I bought the original book on the Edinburgh salvage: "Stalin's Gold" which was an OK read, but after reading it, Mr Jessop didn't come over looking too good ..... and that is an understatement. The writer of that book (a Times' hack called Barry Penrose) clearly had a problem with Mr Jessop, and also some of the divers, and the Ship itself, and the rest of the ship's crew. Not forgetting the sinister Russians etc, etc... and it showed in what he wrote.

Anyone in the dive business at the time of the salvage couldn't help but pick up bits and pieces about this king of salvage ops. It was a really big deal. I knew just three of the dozen or so divers who were involved in the operation, and over 2-3 years following the salvage I got to hear what they had to say about it all. And it was quite a different setup to that written up in "Stalin's Gold".

Reading Keith Jessop's "Goldfinder" was a real pleasure, and sets the record straight on a number of points. Also Keith's earlier career makes for interesting, and occasionally very funny reading. His story-telling ability is a good as it comes when telling "sea-stories" about "the good-old-days" of the diving industry: when the North Sea diving business was very young and new, and every dive job was a bit "hit-and-miss", with work progressing in the usual "making it up as you go along" mode. For me, his stories about this particular time in the dive industry bring back some wonderful memories. Scary memories, but good memories...

And never forget what the guys on the Edinburgh salvage did: 850ft down in the Barents sea, diving from a very small, and by today's standards, very primitive Dive vessel, using oxy-arc cutting torches to burn their way into the Gold room that was full of unexploded ordnance ....

Hmmm, good stuff methinks. Just a touch hairy... just a touch.

The Edinburgh salvage was then, and remains now, the Ultimate deep-diving salvage attempt ever. And they succeeded. Heroes all...

Anyone interested in commercial diving, saturation diving, or salvage diving really should buy and read this book. It's a thumping good read written by a fellow who's done just about all you can do in the commercial diving arena.

It doesn't appear to be ghost-written either. So well done Keith.

Excellent book.

Dennis

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4.0 out of 5 stars Reality of Salvage Work, December 11, 2005
This review is from: Goldfinder: The True Story of $100 Million In Lost Russian Gold -- and One Man's Lifelong Quest to Recover It (Hardcover)
A good read, I was glued to the page turner till 1am last night. This book displays the real world of salvage work, the burocracy you have to work against, the pitfalls, the ways wrecks are found, the research needed and where to find it.

As for the main story of the Edinburg, it is a classic example of a man too focused to worry about the non-research details. His lack of tax planning, failure to background check his partners, and his gruff demeanor set the story up for a sad ending.

Its a real world study of the salvage industry and a great read, but its real life. Don't expect a Dirk Pitt ending with him getting the girl, the gold and the respect of his peers.
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0 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An ok Book, March 15, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Goldfinder: The True Story of $100 Million In Lost Russian Gold -- and One Man's Lifelong Quest to Recover It (Hardcover)
this book was ok its worth reading on a rainy day or in the car.
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