Thursday, June 5, 2014

Book Review: Shipkiller


© 1979 by Justin Scott


Well, thanks to Shipkiller, I now know all I ever wanted to know about deep-sea sailing, but was afraid to ask.  I’ve lived 430 pages over four days with jibs and genoas and lateens, ketches, trimarans and beams, rigging and dhows and lanshes (sp?), dead-reckoning navigation, squalls, and, yes, even gross gross gross sea snakes.

Now, truth be told, I don’t really know about all the methods and materials of deep-sea sailing.  To be perfectly honest, it would probably scare the heck outta me.  Consider the ocean itself: massive, dark, bottomless, id-like.  I remember bobbing in the middle of Lake George as a lad, awaiting the return of the powerboat after I wiped out on water skis.  My only thought, troublesomely terrifying but held in check, was wondering what swam below and beneath, me at its mercy, me at the mercy of powerful yet simple forces beyond my control.  I can only imagine being alone in the middle of the Atlantic in a sailboat would be exponentially more frightening.

Peter Hardin does not find the sea frightening.  He thrives upon it, master and commander of himself, his boat, and the waves.  A middle-aged doctor who retired after a medical invention brought him untold millions, he and his wife Carolyn blissfully sail the seas, falling ever more in love with adventure and freedom and each other.

That is, until Leviathan, the world’s largest supertanker, runs them down somewhere in the northeastern Atlantic.  Their ship is destroyed, Carolyn is lost, and Hardin, catching the killer ship’s name and registry before blacking out, barely survives.  The tanker continues on, Goliath unaware of even David’s presence, a giant with no knowledge of the gnat it just happened to squash.

Our hero, barely alive, is found washed ashore on an English coast by a Nigerian doctor who nurses him back to health over the long days and weeks and months.  Eventually she falls in love with him, consoling him when one by one every legal and political channel denies him justice for the death of his beloved wife on the high seas. 

What else to do, a hundred pages in, except develop an intense Ahab complex?

We follow Hardin closely as he concocts a plan to sink the Leviathan: a new sailboat built for vengeance, an illegal weapon procured for the tanker’s destruction (which brings him to the attention of various national intelligence organizations), a meticulously-plotted course to hunt his prey down, and a whole host of adversaries – the tempestuous Cape of Good Hope, Iranian hovercraft pilots, the eeeevil crotchety Captain Ogilvy of the Leviathan, and those nasty nasty nasty sea snakes.  Heck, that part in the sea storm where Hardin’s sailboat is actually completely underwater brought previously slumbering neuroses and phobias up from my subconsciousness.

Oh, yeah, and there’s a stretch two-thirds of the way in where we’re certain Hardin’s mind has gone completely AWOL.  Something about the hidden meaning of triangles and not speaking a word for five straight weeks …

Hardin encounters his nemesis three times on the high seas in his bloodlust drive for revenge.  The first time, with the help of his Nigerian lover (Ishmael’s stand-in here?) our pseudo-sane doctor is faced with the choice of mutual destruction or no destruction.  The second, chased by just about every single OPEC air and watercraft, results in, well, basically stubbing the giant’s toe and, yes, plummeting into those snake infested Gulf waters.  And the final confrontation –

Well, you’ll just have to read this page-turner.

Grade: A – 

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