Review
'Excellent . . . Nicolette Jones charts [Plimsoll's] course with skill, insight and elegance' SUNDAY TELEGRAPH '[Jones] is sure-footed, never allowing her empathy with her subject to blind her to his failings. Her comprehensive biography ... will be the first port of call for all future researchers' SUNDAY TIMES 'Expertly tracked' OBSERVER 'Jones clearly loves her subject ... Her set-pieces mix sensitivity and narrative gusto. Dickens ... would have delighted in this story' Jonathan Keates 'Fascinating . . . Jones's witty, immaculately researched account of a great campaign is the ideal deckchair book' INDEPENDENT 'Its entirely fitting that his story should be brought to life so vividly by this well-researched and entertaining book' EVENING HERALD 'The author brings the Plimsolls' times to life, showing great empathy with the Victorian working man and the miserable lot of the common sailor at sea.' THE TIMES 'An exhaustively researched and lively account of political activism' SUNDAY TIMES 'Jones is an effective communicator of Plimsoll's passion and her book will endear itself even to those ignorant of shipping' OBSERVER 'A fascinating piece of social history.' SUNDAY HERALD 'Splendid and meticulously researched.' GUARDIAN 'Elegantly written, THE PLIMPSOLL SENSATION is a testament to the might of public opinion and the conviction of a passionate man.' ECONOMIST 'This is an excellent addition that the genre of popular history which sets out to tackle a single theme and ends by illuminating an age.' HISTORICAL NOVELS REVIEW
Neil Hanson, The Sunday Times , 25 June 2006
"[Jones] is sure-footed, never allowing her empathy with her subject to blind her to his failings"
Jonathan Keates, Critic's Choice, The First Post online magazine, 22 June 2006
"Nicolette Jones clearly loves her subject ... Her set-pieces mix sensitivity and narrative gusto."
Geoffrey Moorhouse, Guardian Book of the Week
"splendid and meticulously researched"
Anne Weale, Bookworm on the Net
"outstanding ... the best 'sea' book I've read since Sebastian Junger's The Perfect Storm" -
Jonathan Keates, Critic's Choice, First Post online magazine
"Dickens ... would have delighted in this story's cocktail of cut-throat capitalism, bleeding-heart politics, evangelical piety and simple common sense"
George Rosie, Sunday Herald
"A fascinating piece of social history"
Simon Garfield, The Observer
"Plimsoll's own level of near-fatal submergence is expertly tracked by Jones"
Sam Leith, The Spectator
"a fine piece of work - fluently written, full of interesting things"
Sarah Burton, The Independent
"Jones's account is entirely worthy of its deserving subject."
Product Description
This enthusiastically reviewed, scrupulously researched and prize-winning book, which was a BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week, chronicles a resonant episode of Victorian history. It is the tale of the agitation led by Samuel Plimsoll MP, 'The Sailor's Friend', and by his wife Eliza, who worked together to defend sailors against nefarious practices including overloading and the use of unseaworthy 'coffin-ships'. The backlash of libel cases and vilification almost ruined Plimsoll, but his drive and passion made him feverishly popular with the public; he was the subject of plays, novels, street ballads and music hall songs. With the demonstrative support of the nation, he faced down his enemies, came close to ousting Disraeli's government and achieved lasting safety measures for merchant sailors, including the load line that bears his name. Nicolette Jones throws light on a cross-section of Victorian society and tells the story of an epic legal, social, and political battle for justice, which is still an inspiring example of how the altruism and courage of determined individuals can make the world a better place.
From the Publisher
Winner of the Mountbatten Maritime Award, The Plimsoll Sensation is now also the International Division Winner of the 2007 United States Maritime Literature Awards
From the Author
The Plimsoll Sensation: The Great Campaign to Save Lives at
Sea won the 2006 Mountbatten Maritime Prize.
Sea won the 2006 Mountbatten Maritime Prize.
From the Inside Flap
"Wherever I can get a crowd of men to hear me, I will tell the story of the sailors' bitter wrongs, and how wholesale murder is done, and how it is sending woe and anguish into the humble homes of the poor." - Samuel Plimsoll, 1873
About the Author
Educated at Oxford and Yale, Nicolette Jones is a journalist who has freelanced for the arts pages of all the British broadsheets and writes a column for The Bookseller. She regularly chairs book festivals and appears on radio and TV. She was one of the judges for the 2003 Orange Prize.
Excerpted from The Plimsoll Sensation: The Great Campaign to Save Lives at Sea by Nicolette Jones. Copyright © 2006. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
`Once there was a cause that stirred a nation, nearly dislodged a
prime minister and has since saved hundreds of thousands of lives. It was
taken up by parliamentarians, journalists, businessmen, trade unionists,
novelists, playwrights, clergymen, caricaturists and music-hall performers.
Its supporters flocked to meetings, where they cheered its advocates, and
demonstrated in the streets, condemning its opponents as friends of
villainy. It involved all classes, and men and women alike. Florence
Nightingale contributed money, Queen Victoria expressed sympathy and the
mother-in-law of one of the monarch's daughters lent her time and the
cachet of her titles. It gave the poor a platform to speak out in their own
defence. It is still commemorated in English idiom, in names of streets and
ships, in statues and plaques, in the logo of London Transport and in the
gym shoes of British school children. And yet we hardly remember what it
was all about.'
prime minister and has since saved hundreds of thousands of lives. It was
taken up by parliamentarians, journalists, businessmen, trade unionists,
novelists, playwrights, clergymen, caricaturists and music-hall performers.
Its supporters flocked to meetings, where they cheered its advocates, and
demonstrated in the streets, condemning its opponents as friends of
villainy. It involved all classes, and men and women alike. Florence
Nightingale contributed money, Queen Victoria expressed sympathy and the
mother-in-law of one of the monarch's daughters lent her time and the
cachet of her titles. It gave the poor a platform to speak out in their own
defence. It is still commemorated in English idiom, in names of streets and
ships, in statues and plaques, in the logo of London Transport and in the
gym shoes of British school children. And yet we hardly remember what it
was all about.'