Metacritic Books

The Wreckers
by Bella Bathurst

ISBN: 0618416773
Houghton Mifflin, 288 pages, $25.00
Nonfiction History
Released 07/14/2005

Bathurst's second book (after "The Lighthouse Stevensons") traces 300 years of British history by focusing on the shipwrecks that plague its dangerous shores.

Overall Metascore

This is an average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

75 / 100

Critic Reviews

Outstanding The Guardian Kathryn Hughes
[The Wreckers] is... a fluid, fluent read, a kind of shimmering net of possibility rather than a definitive documentary account which, when you consider the hazy nature of its subject, seems exactly right.
Outstanding The Spectator Andro Linklater
Through the small keyhole of shipwreck, this book offers a deep vision of humanity that is the more uplifting for its lack of sentimentality. I cannot recommend it too highly.
Favorable The Independent Bill Saunders
Bathurst is evidently a persuasive interviewer, and has opened a magic casement on to a lost world on the edge of living memory.
Favorable Daily Telegraph Kate Colquhoun
Some of her most intense passages about the movement of water are breathtakingly novelistic and poetically precise.
Favorable Daily Telegraph Piers Brendon
Often, too, those who lifted goods from dead ships also manned the lifeboats that rescued their crews. This is one of many paradoxes that Bathurst explores in a book that, though flawed, is perfect for the beach.
Favorable The Economist
Grimly fascinating.
Favorable Boston Globe Matthew Price
Bathurst is a footloose researcher and interviewer.... Though she meanders and too frequently digresses, she writes with a playful wit and is obviously captivated by the history of wrecks and wrecking.
Favorable Chicago Tribune Stephanie Zacharek
Bathurst... has a strong feel not just for the people who make their lives on or near the sea, but for the sea itself. [31 July 2005]
Favorable Publishers Weekly
An air of sweet melancholy hangs over Bathurst's poignant account of ships, men and the circumstances that tear them apart.
Mixed Washington Post Daniel I. Davidson
It's a smooth, enjoyable read, as long as we're willing to take entertaining stories at face value without meticulous concern for whether they may be a bit too good to be true.
Mixed The New York Times Book Review Sara Wheeler
Many of the quotations are far too long and undigested. It's a pity, as Bathurst is a good writer. I hope she finds a more substantial subject next time.

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