Photo de l'auteur

Edward Ellsberg (1891–1983)

Auteur de Hell on Ice

20+ oeuvres 438 utilisateurs 8 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Archive of the U.S. War Department

Œuvres de Edward Ellsberg

Hell on Ice (1938) 90 exemplaires
S-51 par le fond (1618) 83 exemplaires
Under the Red Sea Sun (1946) 59 exemplaires
The Far Shore (1960) 51 exemplaires
Captain Paul (1941) 35 exemplaires
No banners, no bugles (1949) 33 exemplaires
Men Under the Sea (1939) 18 exemplaires
Thirty Fathoms Deep (1961) 13 exemplaires
Ocean gold (1935) 7 exemplaires
Pigboats (2017) 7 exemplaires
Mid Watch (1954) 5 exemplaires
Treasure Below (1940) 3 exemplaires
Spanish ingots 1 exemplaire
Passport for Jennifer 1 exemplaire
Cruise of the Jeannette; (1949) 1 exemplaire
Submarine treasure 1 exemplaire
S-54 (1932) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

A Treasury of Sea Stories (1948) — Contributeur — 20 exemplaires
Platt & Munk Great Writers Collection: Melville (1964) — Avant-propos — 14 exemplaires
American Men at Arms (1964) — Contributeur — 10 exemplaires
Full Forty Fathoms: Stories of Underwater Adventure (1975) — Contributeur — 7 exemplaires
Writing Books for Boys and Girls (1952) — Contributeur, quelques éditions5 exemplaires

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Critiques

Great true stories of naval salvage from the Red Sea to North Africa to Normandy.
 
Signalé
IlliniDave | Jan 4, 2023 |
For 1930s diving geeks, a "manly adventure" in which Latinos are sprigs and the black cook has a politically incorrect walk on, the girl is 1) good for explaining diving to 2) gets leering glances to let us know who the bad guy is 3) is used as a hostage. With all the depth of a movie pitch, this is only for historical interest.
 
Signalé
quondame | Nov 18, 2021 |
Written over 90 years ago, the volume I checked out from the library is 89 years old, torn, stained, missing picture, rebound at least a couple of times and sporting 5 punctures that go 40 pages in from the title page. This doesn't read quite like fiction, as it really isn't, but is sort of an incident by incident short story retelling of how the S-51 submarine was raised from 160+ feet of water in stormy seas. What is mostly absent in this narrative is anything above the level of what was going on at the scene. Since the impetus for this mission was almost entirely political and the initial urge was to contract out the inevitable failure, there must have been a fair deal of second guessing going on when the winter called a halt and new divers had to be trained, not to mention when a storm wrecked the first effort at raising the S-51. Clearly, the S-51 was raised, and much was learned and new technologies established.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
quondame | Jul 6, 2018 |
A solid tale solidly told of bringing up gold from a sunken treasure chest. Front loaded with a great deal of technical information about the bends and deep sea diving equipment extant in the 1920s, the meat of this book is retelling of barely survivable diving mishaps/disasters, spiced with how to get drunk 30 fathoms deep and a battle with pirates.

Written by my great uncle, the son of late 19th century Jewish emigrants turned Episcopalian, this illustrates the difference between the early 20th century notion of blending pot and our current notion of diversity. The named good guys are relentlessly anglo-norman, the bad guys include the Spaniard Pedro and the pirate crew is a motley scum of the earth. The cook valet Fritz is so stereotypical 'darky' it just plain hurts. As for character development, it would be hard because there is hardly a whiff of character to begin with. A bit of banter among the 4 divers is about it.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
quondame | Jun 16, 2018 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
20
Aussi par
5
Membres
438
Popularité
#55,890
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
8
ISBN
40
Langues
3

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