cover image IN PERIL: A Daring Decision, a Captain's Resolve, and the Salvage That Made History

IN PERIL: A Daring Decision, a Captain's Resolve, and the Salvage That Made History

Skip Strong, . . Lyons, $22.95 (252pp) ISBN 978-1-59228-105-3

Strong and Braden's tale of an imperfect storm, three ships and a daring rescue comes to vivid life in this gem of a book. Strong, captain of an oil tanker carrying 10 million gallons of crude, was trying to outrun tropical storm Gordon when he picked up a distress call off the Florida coast in the early hours of November 15, 1994. An oceangoing tug with a cargo barge tethered behind it had lost engine power and was foundering. Strong decided to attempt a rescue, although doing so put his own crew and cargo, not to mention hundreds of miles of Florida coast, at risk of a catastrophic oil spill. Strong also didn't know that the barge's cargo, a brand-new external fuel tank for a space shuttle, was worth nearly $50 million. The successful rescue of all life and property later resulted in a landmark judgment in court when the company that owned Strong's ship claimed, via long-standing maritime laws, the right to a percentage of the value of the rescued goods. Strong's first-person narration of the immediate story is gripping, while still allowing for discursions into topics such as shipping, admiralty law and meteorology. Strong and co-writer Braden don't rush into the high-seas drama, but the complex details involved in the rescue itself are sharp and clear. The court case is anticlimactic, but the authors don't linger on it unnecessarily. This is a great story, well told. Photos. Agent, Laureen Rowland. (Nov.)