The Outlaw Sea.THE OUTLAW SEA. William Langewiesche William Langewiesche (pronounced:long-gah-vee-shuh[1]) is an American author and journalist, and was a professional airplane pilot for many years. He is currently the international editor for the magazine Vanity Fair . 2004. Read by the author. 6 cds. 7.5 hrs. Audio Renaissance. 1-59397-436-1. $29.95. Cardboard; content, author notes. SA Calling the world's oceans and the traffic upon them "an inherently disorderly affair," Langewiesche offers proof with facts and stories that will engage lovers of true adventure. He recounts the loss of the Crystal, an ailing ship carrying molasses molasses, sugar byproduct, the brownish liquid residue left after heat crystallization of sucrose (commercial sugar) in the process of refining. Molasses contains chiefly the uncrystallizable sugars as well as some remnant sucrose. , because the captain refused to slow it in a rising gale. The Alondro Rainbow, pirated and camouflaged, was recovered by India. When the Estonia, a ferry with problems indifferently addressed, sank in the Baltic Sea Baltic Sea, arm of the Atlantic Ocean, c.163,000 sq mi (422,170 sq km), including the Kattegat strait, its northwestern extension. The Øresund, Store Bælt, and Lille Bælt connect the Baltic Sea with the Kattegat and Skagerrak straits, which lead to the in 1994, 852 died. Langewiesche tells of convoluted convoluted /con·vo·lut·ed/ (kon?vo-lldbomact´ed) rolled together or coiled. patterns of registry and ownership, ships flying "flags of convenience," and routine flouting of the 1994 International Law of the Sea, to which the US is not a signatory sig·na·to·ry adj. Bound by signed agreement: the signatory parties to a contract. n. pl. sig·na·to·ries One that has signed a treaty or other document. . He deals with the threat of terrorism related to sea cargo and the dangerous work of recycling worn-out ships, called shipbreaking, relegated to poor Asian countries. He gives a balanced account of the efforts of Greenpeace and describes genuine US efforts that suggest that doing it responsibly costs more than the reclaimed metal is worth. Langewiesche reads with a deep voice in a smooth, introspective in·tro·spect intr.v. in·tro·spect·ed, in·tro·spect·ing, in·tro·spects To engage in introspection. [Latin intr tone. Excellent for listeners who may have suspected that there is much that goes unreported at sea. S--Recommended for senior high school students. A--Recommended for advanced students and adults. This code will help librarians and teachers working in high schools where there are honors and advanced placement students. This also will help extend KLIATT's usefulness in public libraries. Edna Boardman, Bismarck, ND |
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