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Well written, easy read and exciting, thank you Michael for another great story. You must keep writing about New England heroes and their truly exciting adventures.
This book reports what happenned during the "Perfect Storm" on George's Bank off the Mass. This is the most important book regarding commercial fishing because it is real. coast. It should be required reading as the general public is never told about what goes on on the ocean. It is part of our country but the media cheats us and fishermen by not reporting it. Please read this book and pay attention to what's going on. Your fish should come from here but the Fed's are not helping.
Reading this book brought back memories. of reading The Perfect Storm. Obviously differing in the details, it's the same story, told in much the same way.
It had not been for some time. It is no place to be in a small boat; especially when the weather turns bad. One boat pitch-poled; it's lone survivor spent 50 frightening and misearable hours in a rubber raft before rescue. And weather in the month of November on the Georges Bank can be extreme.
Fatal Forecast is a story of survival, duty and triumph of the human spirit. Ordinarily, automated buoy data provide the National Weather Service with information that enables relatively accurate forcasting. But in November 1980 the National Data Center's Georges Bank Buoy, located 170 nM east of Hyannis, MA, was not functioning. The Georges Bank lies about 120 miles east of Cape Cod. I could not put it down. They did not expect a killer storm packing 100 knot winds and 50-60 foot seas.
Another boat badly damaged by a rogue wave and leaking badly fought on and eventually limped back to port. Brave men and women of the U.S Coastguard, in spite of fatique and grave danger to themselves, doggedly attempted to rescue the crews of these vessels.
When I got to the end I read the Epilogue and even the author's notes. Wind-driven waves building from the fetch of the Atlantic collide with the shallows beyond the continental shelf and can build to frightening proportions.
The book is well-written and grabs you from the Prologue and does not let go. With inadequate data, the National Weather Service issued a benign forecast.
Based on this forecast, four deep sea lobster boats headed for the Georges Bank. In fact, I read this book at a single sitting.
I did not want it to end.
I got this for Christmas and finished it within 3 days. Probably my favorite catastrophe book yet. Very well written, making it so hard to put down once you start reading. Tougias not only rendered an awesome account of a real life dramatic fight for survival but also relayed vividly the other events that occurred in the lives of the men and families affected by the disaster at sea. A must read for those who enjoy seeing man triumph over the most trying adventure.
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