Lusitania by David Butler
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Description
Bibliographic Details
- Author: David Butler
- Title: Lusitania
- Publisher: Random House Inc.; First Edition (January 1, 1985)
- Language: English
- Format: Hardcover – 578 pages
- ISBN-10: 0394528093
- ISBN-13: 978-0394528090
- Item Weight: 2.15 pounds
- Dimensions: 6.4 X 2.0 x 9.3 inches
- Book Condition: Used – Very Good
- Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good
- Edition: First Edition (Rare Book / Collectible)
Synopsis:
The author's fourth historical novel, the story of the sinking of this great ship after it was hit by a German torpedo on May 7, 1915, with the loss of 1200 lives.
The sinking of the Lusitania has long been perceived as the reason the United States went to war in 1917. But according to Daniel Allen Butler, author of Unsinkable, the story is much more complex.
Butler makes extensive use of primary accounts, letting the participants tell their stories in their own words. More than simply chronicling the events leading up the sinking, The Lusitania follows the rescue and fate of the people aboard her; recounts the inquiry after the sinking, led by none other than Lord Mersey of the Titanic inquiry fame; and explains why and how the sinking of the Lusitania by a German U-20 set the tone for the twentieth century's interpretation of "total war."
About the Author:
David Butler (12 November 1927…27 May 2006) was a Scottish writer of numerous screenplays and teleplays who won an Emmy Award and was nominated for an Oscar and a Golden Globe. He specialized in period-piece drama and is particularly remembered for a string of hit British TV shows, including Within These Walls, Lillie, We'll Meet Again and Edward the Seventh, as well as for his acting, most specifically as Dr. Nick Williams on British television's first medical soap opera, Emergency – Ward 10 in 1960—62.
A native of the town of Larkhall in South Lanarkshire, less than 30 km from Glasgow, David Dalrymple Butler was born into a well-educated family, with his parents working as teachers. At the age of 18, as World War II came to an end, he enrolled at Scotland's oldest institution of higher learning, University of St Andrews, but ultimately abandoned his studies before attaining a degree, upon becoming interested in acting with the university drama society. He subsequently trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts and began his performing career in West End revues. In 1956, at the age of 29, he played a prison officer in Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop production of Brendan Behan's The Quare Fellow.
In 1959 he married actress Norma Ronald and, by the early 1960s, was supplementing his acting career with scriptwriting. Following a 1966 divorce, his 1969 marriage to Mary McPhail lasted for the remainder of his life and produced two daughters. By 1971 he had mostly given up acting and began to devote all of his energies to turning out teleplays. One of his first successes in the historical genre was 1972's The Strauss Family followed by many other productions, including The Duchess of Duke Street in 1976—77, 1978's Disraeli, starring Ian McShane and his 1986 Emmy-winning Mountbatten: The Last Viceroy with Nicol Williamson in the title role.
Circumstances also permitted an occasional return to acting, as in his own teleplays of the 1974—78 TV prison series Within These Walls, in some episodes of which he played the penal institution chaplain, Rev. Henry Prentice. During this time, he also received the honor of being nominated for American cinema's Academy Award for his historical screenplay of 1976's Voyage of the Damned, depicting the 1939 attempt by 937 Jews to escape the looming Holocaust via a ship traveling from Hitler's Germany to Havana, but denied permission to disembark in Cuba or in the United States.
David Butler died in London at the age of 78.
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