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Jackson, Joe

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Born January 1, 1954 (72 years old)
Also known as: JOE JACKSON, Joe Jackson
7 books
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14 readers
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Books

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A Furnace Afloat

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When an accident with an open oil lantern set the American clipper Hornet alight in 1866, the 31 passengers and crew were forced to abandon ship. Cast adrift in three small lifeboats, they had less than 10 days' rations to share between them. They were over 1,000 miles from the nearest island. Over the next six weeks they were to encounter every danger the Pacific could throw at them. They were attacked by sharks and swordfish. They endured storms, and even tornadoes. Their hunger became so intense that they resorted to eating their clothes, and later, half-mad from the effects of drinking sea water, were driven to the edge of cannibalism. Of the 31 men who abandoned ship, only 15 ever saw land again. The newspapers of the time were quick to hail the survivors as heroes; however, as Joe Jackson shows, there was much about the behavior of the castaways that was far from heroic. In the confined space of the open boats tensions between the men ran so high that the threat of violence was constantly present. There was open talk of mutiny, even of murder, and gradually the normal rules of society began to break down. Here, for the first time, is the true story of the men who survived the wreck of the Hornet. Written by Pulitzer Prize-nominated author Joe Jackson, it is one of the rare great historical survival tales from the dying days of the age of sail. - Jacket flap.

Leavenworth Train

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"Frank Grigware, in 1909, was sentenced to life in Leavenworth, the first federal penitentiary, for a crime he didn't commit. He escaped when he joined five convicts in hijacking a supply train and ramming through the joint's west gate. For the next twenty-four years, Frank Grigware, America's most elusive fugitive, ran from the law. Joe Jackson begins Grigware's story in the waning days of the Old West. The Pinkertons and the hard hand of federal law have corralled most of the region's fabled desperadoes, but the whole country remains drunk on tales of blood and destiny. Fed by the vanishing frontier's legends, Grigware sets out to find gold in the Idaho mountains, only to be confronted by harsh realities. Taken in by a crew of train robbers, the guileless Grigware finds himself a target of an investigation for a crime he had no hand in. Grigware's flight takes him across the American plains and the Canadian border to a new life as a husband, father, and mayor of a small town. Tracked doggedly by J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI through the 1920s and '30s, Grigware is ultimately arrested by Mounties in Jasper, Alberta - and becomes the focus of an international incident. A true story of a daring Western fugitive and a revealing examination of the qualities of justice in two neighboring nations, Jackson's book lays bare a war against crime that ends with a surprising twist, as justice proves to be capricious, the servant of time and place and ambition, yet tempered by the mercy of women and men."--BOOK JACKET.

Atlantic fever

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This work is an account of the race to cross the Atlantic, and the larger-than-life personalities of the aviators who captured the world's attention In 1919, a prize of $25,000 was offered to the first aviator to cross the Atlantic in either direction between France and America. Although it was one of the most coveted prizes in the world, it sat unclaimed (not without efforts) for eight long years, until the spring of 1927. It was then, during five incredibly tense weeks, that one of those magical windows in history opened, when there occurred a nexus of technology, innovation, character, and spirit that led so many contenders (from different parts of the world) to all suddenly be on the cusp of the exact same achievement at the exact same time. This book is about the race; it is a milestone in American history whose story has never been fully told. Richard Byrd, Noel Davis, Stanton Wooster, Clarence Chamberlin, Charles Levine, Rene Fonck, Charles Nungesser, and François Coli, all had equal weight in the race with Charles Lindbergh. Although the story starts in September 1926 with the crash of the first competitor, or even further back with the 1919 establishment of the prize, its heart is found in a short period, those five weeks from April 14 to May 21, 1927, when the world held its breath and the aviators met their separate fates in the air.

Black Elk: The Life of an American Visionary

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"Describes the life of the Native American holy man who fought at Little Big Horn, witnessed the death of his cousin Crazy Horse, traveled to Europe as part of Buffalo Bill's Wild West show and became a traditionalist in the Ghost Dance movement"--