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Titanic: The Untold Story

 
 
Titanic: The Untold Story
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Titanic: The Untold Story

Aboard the legendary R.M.S. Titanic the lives of four passengers are changed forever. Nathan Badeau Legarde, the ship's only Negro passenger must cheat death to save his family and collect his inheritance in America...Nicolette, his headstrong French wife must choose between financial security and her dreams...Helen Ryerson, a shy New York spinster plans a murder...and Jimmy Ray Tuttle, a Southern misfit seeks revenge...All sailing toward their destiny on the most glamorous, most famous ship in the world.

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749781419695735

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Product Details:
Author: W. Mae Kent
Paperback: 414 pages
Publisher: BookSurge Publishing
Publication Date: December 08, 2008
Language: English
ISBN: 1419695738
Product Length: 5.24 inches
Product Width: 7.99 inches
Product Height: 0.85 inches
Product Weight: 0.94 pounds
Package Length: 7.9 inches
Package Width: 5.1 inches
Package Height: 1.1 inches
Package Weight: 1.2 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 4 reviews
 
 

Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:3.5 ( 4 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5Titanic The Untold Story Unsinkable  Aug 05, 2009
By Horace M. Connor
An undescribably amazing ficitional but believable story that holds one's interest. The story is one that would hold the interest of everyone of all ethnic backgrounds. Nathan Legard is inspiring in his addressment of the challenges he encountered during his Titanic voyage to America to claim his inheritance.

I see many of his challenges in my own life's personal story. Henceforth for me this story is spiritual and encouraging to know that one must never give up and always continue to pursue your dreams despite adversities.

I find the author Ms. Mae Kent to be creative, and exceptional writer and genuinely caring sensitive person in how she portrayed life from the eyes of a person of color, but also from both open and closed minded whites of that time era. This book is a must read for everyone historian or not.

3Original and fresh; near the end, couldn't put it down  Mar 17, 2009
By M. L Lamendola
Kent can weave a good story. This one takes place in the form of an historical novel, with most of the action occurring in 1912. The characters are real and the dialogue is good. I enjoyed reading it.

The book has a few rough edges and could use a good copyediting for typos, misspellings, and incorrect word usage. But, let's keep that in perspective; Mae is way ahead of, say, John Grisham on this score. A few plot items could also be improved, but generally the author rewards the reader's trust.

The book was interesting from the start. But it became compelling at one point. Even with a major element of the story already known (the Titanic sinks), I found myself unable to put the novel down from the moment Mrs. Legarde hears a sound "like a large chair being scraped against the floor." Ah, we know what that is! When will each character find out what that means, what will they do, and what will happen to them? The tension mounts as the main characters face one challenge and then another, with no clear way out.

This novel is just over 400 pages long. It consists of 37 chapters of varying length, plus a prologue and a denouement. The central character of the story is Nathan Legarde. Young Nathan fled his native Louisiana as a pre-teen, due to a seminal event that occurred there (and which is not resolved until the end of the novel).

He fled to France as a youngster, which is an important fact in this story.

At the time this story took place, a lot of crazy thinking was considered normal. In the controlling society of the time, people with a higher melanin concentration and some other secondary characteristics were supposedly inferior to people with a lower melanin concentration and different secondary characteristics--a situation we call "racial prejudice." This problem isn't nearly as bad today, although in some parts of the USA a person can still be pulled over for Driving While Black (happened a few years back to a neighbor of mine, though she holds two Master's Degrees).

In this story, the lead character has a "black" mother and a "white" father. He's also married to a "white" woman who is a native of France and together they have young children.

In France, the prejudice wasn't nearly the problem it was in the USA at that time. This situation provided Nathan opportunities that would have been denied him in America around the beginning of the 20th Century. And he seized those opportunities. He earned an engineering degree and distinguished himself as an athlete (in fencing, for example). He also distinguished himself in his career and had a solid reputation.

Then Nathan's father, as he is dying, leaves Nathan with a mission. That mission is the plot vehicle for the story, as it requires him to travel from France to America. His father gives Nathan tickets to go there with his wife and children, aboard the brand new Titanic. Inside a satchel are some other items he will need for this mission, and those come into play at different times in the story.

As the plot moves forward, Nathan is confronted by prejudice but also befriends people who respect him for who he is and what he does. The book isn't about prejudice and doesn't get preachy or (on the other hand) apologetic. It just tells the story, using the mentality of the time to make it interesting and believable as the various characters interact.

Nathan has some flaws that manifest themselves into subplots within the story. Several other characters act out their insecurities and this kind of characterization makes them real, rather than cardboard. The main villains have their own twisted logic, but it's logic nonetheless and these people are also believable.

Try this book for something original and fresh. I think you'll enjoy it.

1 of 2 found the following review helpful:

1Titanic the untold story  Jan 31, 2010
By J. Stalmack "book lover"
The premises was interesting, till you read the book. There was a Black man married to a Ffrench woman on the titanic and they did have two daughters, that's about the extent of the truth, The rest was sheer stupidity. The other story anout the woman who resents her mentally retared sister and plans to kill her but ends up dying in the sinking was equally as crazy. The untold story was just in the writers mind. I ended up speed reading this worthless story. Anyone who is really interested in the Titanic should steer very clear from this dribble.

1 of 2 found the following review helpful:

5Titantic The Untold Story - A fasinating read  Aug 05, 2009
By Andre Howell
This was simply an outstanding fictional account of the life and times of the only black man on board the Titantic! The story line was compelling, full of twists and turns making it difficult to put the book down for more than a few minutes at a time. The author's ability to keep the reader's interest by including provocative characters with interesting personal issues all came together in this novel; while at the same time not distracting from the central figure. One could not discount all the social pressures that confronted Nathan at a time when mixed marriages were clearly frowned upon. Despite this, he not only endured the harsh treatment from those who distained such relationships, he conquered racism by standing firmly on his principles and not accepting the status quo of the times, by considering himself anything less than the great man and leader that he was.

Kudos to Ms. Kent for her creative approach in telling this story and providing the readers with a broad perspective on what his life and experiences entailed.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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