Lusitania: Triumph, Tragedy And The End Of The Victorian Age

Author: Greg King and Penny Wilson

Stock information

General Fields

  • : $12.00 NZD
  • : 9781250080356
  • : Griffin Publishing
  • : Saint Martin's Griffin,U.S.
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  • : May 2016
  • : 210mm X 139mm X 27mm
  • : United States
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  • : books

Special Fields

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  • : Greg King and Penny Wilson
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  • : Paperback
  • : 516
  • :
  • :
  • : very good
  • : 416
  • : one 8 page black and white photograph section
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Barcode 9781250080356
9781250080356

Description

Lusitania: She was a ship of dreams, carrying millionaires and aristocrats, actresses and impresarios, writers and suffragettes - a microcosm of the last years of the waning Edwardian Era and the coming influences of the Twentieth Century. When she left New York on her final voyage, she sailed from the New World to the Old; yet-an encounter with the machinery of the New World, in the form of a primitive German U-Boat, sent her - and her gilded passengers - to their tragic deaths and opened up a new era of indiscriminate warfare. A hundred years after her sinking, Lusitania remains an evocative ship of mystery. Was she carrying munitions that exploded? Did Winston Churchill engineer a conspiracy that doomed the liner? Lost amid these tangled skeins is the romantic, vibrant, and finally heartrending tale of the passengers who sailed aboard her. Lives, relationships, and marriages ended in the icy waters off the Irish Sea; those who survived were left haunted and plagued with guilt. Now, authors Greg King and Penny Wilson resurrect this lost, glittering world to show the golden age of travel and illuminate the most prominent of Lusitania's passengers. Rarely was an era so glamorous; rarely was a ship so magnificent; and rarely was the human element of tragedy so quickly lost to diplomatic maneuvers and militaristic threats.

Promotion info

100 years after its sinking, Greg King and Penny Wilson tell the story of the Lusitania's glamorous passengers and the torpedo that ended an era and prompted the US entry into World War I.