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The Wreckers - A Story of Killing Seas, False Lights and Plundered Ships (Paperback)
Loot Price: R294
Discovery Miles 2 940
You Save: R93
(24%)
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The Wreckers - A Story of Killing Seas, False Lights and Plundered Ships (Paperback)
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List price R387
Loot Price R294
Discovery Miles 2 940
You Save R93 (24%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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From the bestselling author of 'The Lighthouse Stevensons', a
gripping history of the drama and danger of wrecking since the
18th-century - and the often grisly ingenuity of British wreckers,
scavengers of the sea. A fine wreck has always represented sport,
pleasure, treasure, and in many cases, the difference between
living well and just getting by. The Cornish were supposedly so
ferocious that notices of shipwrecks were given out during morning
service by the minister, whilst the congregation concocted
elaborate theological justifications for drowning the survivors.
Treeless islanders relied on the harvest of storms to furnish
themselves with rafters, boat hulls, fence-posts and floors. In
other places, false lights were set up with grisly ingenuity along
the coast to lure boats to destruction. With romance, insight and
dry wit, Bella Bathurst traces the history of wrecking, looting and
salvaging in the British Isles since the 18th-century and leading
up to the present day. 'For a fully laden general cargo to run to
ground in an accessible position is more or less like having
Selfridges crash-land in your back garden,' she writes. 'A
Selfridges with the prices removed'. Far from being a
black-and-white crime, wrecking is often seen as opaque by its
practitioners - the divisions between theft and recovery are small.
No successful legal prosecution has ever been brought; the RNLI was
founded by wreckers - even today lifeboat crews maintain the right
to claim salvage. In settings ranging from the eerily perambulatory
Goodwin Sands to the wreck-strewn waters off the coast of Durham,
these murky tales of resourcefulness and quick-witted opportunism
open a beguiling vista of life at the rough edges of our land and
legality.
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