BIll Robinson's first novel-a saga of personal trauma and nautical peril-is based on actual events during the great Tokyo earthquake of 1923, when a passenger liner with 3,000 people aboard faced imminent destruction from the raging elements and was saved by the captain's courage and skills.
Set against the backdrop of an actual earthquake that ravaged Japan in 1923, this intense first novel opens with the ocean liner Oriental Monarch preparing to depart Yokohama harbor as the disaster strikes. Robinson, former editor of Yachting magazine and author of many nonfiction books on sailing, describes the quake and its aftermath, deftly depicting the technical problems of saving the liner from a fiery oil slick without either boring or patronizing the reader. Numerous subplots-- a movie star's drug addiction, the ship doctor's alcoholism, the captain's love affair with a member of the Swedish consulate, the plight of two children orphaned by the quake-- vary the pace and keep the disaster scenes from becoming overwhelming. A murder further complicates the busy narrative, which falters only at the very end, when the author succumbs to the temptation to tie up all the loose ends too quickly. Nonetheless, this is a believable drama written in clear prose that never resorts to hyperbole.