Voyage on the Great Titanic: The Diary of Margaret Ann Brady, R.M.S. Titanic, 1912 (Dear America)

Voyage on the Great Titanic: The Diary of Margaret Ann Brady, R.M.S. Titanic, 1912 (Dear America)
Publisher
Age Range
8+
Release Date
September 01, 1998
ISBN
0590962736
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Written from the point of view of a young passenger aboard the ill-fated Titanic, this title combines an award-winning series with the "disaster of the century".

Written from the point of view of a young passenger aboard the ill-fated Titanic, this title combines an award-winning series with the "disaster of the century".

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Trip on the Titanic
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When her brother left her sick and weak on an orphanage stoop in Whitechapel, England, Margaret Ann Brady wondered if she would see him again. Years later, after her brother seeks his fortune in America, Margaret is offered the opportunity to become a ladys companion to Mrs. Carstairs, an American on her way home. Margaret rejoices in the chance to rejoin her brother and eagerly boards the RMS Titanic with her new mistress. But the ship strikes an iceberg and Margaret finds her dreams of reaching her brother, and even her very life, imperiled.

Sadly, Voyage on the Great Titanic by Ellen Emerson White lacked real tension in the story. Portions of the plotting proceeded slowly, floundering like the great ship herself. No real conflict exists from the time of boarding the ship until the accident. White adds no new surprises or nuances to this old story and brings little emotional connectivity to the reader/protagonist relationship.

It also feels implausible that a lower-class orphan, even of exceptional intelligence, should use such elegant phrases as I so prefer to guard my privacy that I do not think I would accept such a directive from anyone else & or I will keep your disgraceful breach of protocol to myself.

This relaunch of a 1998 release does paint a picture of the elegant life aboard Titanic and fans of the Dear America series may enjoy the book because of the thrilling, though horrible, eventone that continues to intrigue many. Those interested in the sinking of the Titanic will find interesting tidbits here that jibe with other books and movies. This book, while not great literature, would be an appropriate vehicle for understanding this historical happening. To that end, it includes a historical note, photographs and illustrations, and a timeline.
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So, So Sad
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Reader reviewed by PeaceChik

This book is reeeealllly sad!
It's almost too sad to read...but then again its really a good book.
You know how the Titanic story goes. And if you don't pay attention!
Okay, so there is an orphan girl, who at a London orphanage gets the chance to go to America with this lady and rejoin her older brother. The Titanic is suppose to be unsinkable, so there are like too little lifeboats. The girl(Margret) enjoys the Titanic is great and majestic to a girl like her and since shes 13 she falls for her cabin boy.
But then something goes wrong, ther's a hole in the Titanic! But...there's not enough life boats for the thousands on there. So many die...so so sad.
G
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