Submerged
Life on a Fast Attack Submarine in the Last Days of the Cold War
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Henry Rausch
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Voz Virtual es una narración generada por computadora para audiolibros..
Finalist, 2025 Self-Publishing Review Book Awards
The author graduates from an elite university and enters the submarine service in the mid-1980s when rhetoric between the US and USSR threatens to turn the Cold War hot. He encounters an unforgiving world where submarines hunt each other unseen and unheralded in the ocean depths and in which minor mistakes can result in catastrophe. On four classified missions to the Mediterranean Sea, the North Atlantic, the Barents Sea, and the North Pole, he gradually and painfully learns the trade of a nuclear submarine officer in a world few people know of and even fewer have experienced.
These missions exert a heavy personal toll. At sea, the submarine crew exercises total radio silence and the rescue buoy is welded fast to the hull, ensuring that their families will never know if a catastrophe occurs. During these missions, his young wife suffers a miscarriage and later gives birth via emergency C-section, all while the author is at sea and unaware. While she undergoes these trials alone, the sub conducts missions vital to the security of the United States. Far from home, in the unforgiving depths, they track adversary submarines in dangerous games of cat and mouse where a mistake could result in a collision, flooding, and death. A storm damages the sub on the way to the North Pole, jeopardizing the ability to surface through the ice. They finally do so, after weeks of transiting through underwater ice canyons of pressure ridges capable of rupturing the hull on impact. While under the ice the crew suffers a poison gas leak and has to find a hole to surface quickly or perish.
The main theme of the work is growth. As the author journeyed to the ends of the earth and the depths of the ocean, he also made a personal journey from a sniveling boy-man to an apex predator of the deep. Sub-themes are how men and women cope with adversity, and how when things are at their worst, people are at their best. It is a tribute to the human spirit, especially the men who sailed these ships, and the families who loved and supported them.
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Interesting, AI voice wasn’t as bad as I expected.
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there were a few liberties taken with the story. if you were stationed at pier Mike or the weapons station in the mid to late 80s, you'll catch it. not sure what to think about the Scotland story either, lol. wasnt like that when I was TAD to the Hunley around the same time, but it was entertaining.
Too bad it was virtual voice, the acronyms were slaughtered lol, but a Navy person will be able to figure out what most of it is. others, not so much. so I'd love to ask the author about that aircraft carrier off the coast of Charleston.... come on man, keep it believable. I'm thinking someone changed your ending, didnt even sound like the same person. overall I'm glad I read it, brought back memories.
I really enjoyed this book.
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Authentic view of sub life and leedership
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I appreciated hearing that O-gangers suffered from many of the same personnel mismanagement issues as did the working crew.
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It’s weakness is using a robo-reader to perform the task of narration. This is a GREAT weakness. It almost ruins the book. The book is well written and deserves a human reader with a knowledge of navy terms. Far too many mispronounded words and particularly acronyms. Submarine hatches are “dogged,” not “dog-ed.” Junior officers are “jay-ohs,” not “joes.” The officer of the deck, the OOD, is always read by the robot as the one syllable word “uud.” The sub’s engineering officer in the navy world is the “eng,” as in engine, not “ing” as in ring. And so on.
Still worth a listen, but you’ll wince at some of the robot reader errors.
Excellent Submarine True Story
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