The Salving of the "Fusi Yama": A Post-War Story of the Sea by Percy F. Westerman
Who doesn’t love a good “can this hunk of metal be saved?” story? The Salving of the “Fusi Yama”: A Post-War Story of the Sea by Percy F. Westerman is exactly that—a vintage adventure set right after World War I that feels like a buddy movie mixed with a documentary.
The Story
So, the setup is simple but gripping: the Fusi Yama, a Japanese battleship that was sunk by a German submarine in 1918, is lying 100 feet down off the British coast. The British government (probably tired of looking at her) contracts the Pullman Salvage Company to bring her up. Enter Captain Brooks, an expert salvage man, and his son, a hyper-observant teen who’s along for the ride and ends up being the brains of the operation.
The whole tale is paced like an extreme DIY show. The team tries everything: giant pontoons, suction hoses, rocket flares, and your basics like hammers and sweat. They face exploding gases, rogue torpedoes, and attacks from overeager gulls. There’s even a tense side plot—a mystery involving a hidden fault that almost dooms the job. The writing moves fast, and Westerman doesn’t stuff it with fluff.
Why You Should Read It
First off, it’s satisfyingly ahead of its time for 1924. Westerman really plunges into the technology of salvage without being a snooze (you learn about marine engineering without realizing it). The father-son duo is old-school cute – no melodrama, just heaps of “we can do this!” action. This book assumes you’re smart and treats awkward sea sentences like comedy gold (pun ships intentional). Also, it doesn’t bother with hidden or magical plots; it’s just blue-collar dedication against the sea. There are cool boat races, slight tension between characters that adds punch, and an ending that rewards you with two words: success gush.
But practically, for me, jumping from scrap one minute to near-tragedy (explosions, silly stunts!) the next keeps you hooked more than today’s average eight-hour series.
Final Verdict
Perfect for history nerds, clean #wattpad readers before they were born, and anybody craving a mano-a-mano struggle with nature. If you liked Eight Oars and 24 Men or just have a dusty secret crush on salvage, you want this. It suits general folk of all ages (12+ if you can read left-to-right sarcasm); a tidy Kindle-short read of heroic splashing without love interest. But honestly? Even 100 years after, you might share quotes marine engineers want to hug. Higher risk of sea-sick admiration the fun way. Take a wild chance, and hoist an imaginary anchor with this one
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