In the nineteenth century true stories of cannibal tribes massacring white traders (and vice versa) and missionaries fed the morbid appetites of Europeans, North Americans and colonials. Accounts of cannibalism committed by seafarers on their dead shipmates quickened the pulses of landfolk even more, and pricked their moral disquiet. Acts of desperate men committing unspeakable atrocities. The warring frenzy of cannibal headhunters and their gruesome feasting. Such was the stuff of real-life 'sixpenny romances', rich in human butchery and garnished with treachery and terror. The more atrocious the at rocities, the more exotic the locations; the more sensational the narratives, the greater was the thrall of these thrilling tales of the sea.
The Mysterious Case of the Mary Celeste : 150 Years of Myth and Mystique
Graham Faiella
bookMysteries and Sea Monsters : Thrilling Tales of the Sea (vol.4)
Graham Faiella
bookCastaways - Adrift and Abandoned : Thrilling Tales of the Sea (vol.3)
Graham Faiella
bookMisery, Mutiny and Menace : Thrilling Tales of the Sea (vol.2)
Graham Faiella
bookCannibals and Carnage : Thrilling Tales of the Sea (vol.1)
Graham Faiella
book
Cannibals and Carnage : Thrilling Tales of the Sea (vol.1)
Graham Faiella
bookMisery, Mutiny and Menace : Thrilling Tales of the Sea (vol.2)
Graham Faiella
bookCastaways - Adrift and Abandoned : Thrilling Tales of the Sea (vol.3)
Graham Faiella
bookMysteries and Sea Monsters : Thrilling Tales of the Sea (vol.4)
Graham Faiella
book