Death Ship

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1920s
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abandonment
absurdism
anarchism
anarchist
Author_B. Traven
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Category=FXV
Category=FYT
classic books
classic fiction
classic literature
classics
communism
communist
death ship
endurance
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ernest hemingway
europe
forthcoming
franz kafka
george orwell
german
german literature
germany
herman melville
history
identity crisis
jack london
joseph conrad
maritime
mexican
mexico
migration
moby dick
sailor
sea
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social justice
stowaway
stranded
survival
the myth of persecution
the treasure of the sierra madre
the white rose
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voyage

Product details

  • ISBN 9780241822210
  • Weight: 500g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Whoever survived the Yorikke could never be frightened any more during his lifetime by anything

Stateless and stranded after he loses his passport, sailor Gerald Gales flees arrest and persecution across Europe, until he finally finds work on the Yorikke, a decrepit ‘death ship’ bound for destruction. Condemned to stoke the furnaces, Gales must navigate a labyrinth of surreal rules and the brutal realities of life at sea if he is to make it out alive. First published in 1926 and thought to bear the traces of the mysterious author B. Traven’s own experience of migrating to Mexico, The Death Ship is a darkly absurd, raging tale about what it takes to survive when life is cheap.

Little is known for certain about the life of B. Traven; a prolific writer, he is best known for his beloved adventure novel The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, and the Jungle Novels, a series set during and after the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution, with proletarian, anarchist themes. During his lifetime, he was variously (and incorrectly) identified as the son of Kaiser Wilhelm I, or a North German brickmaker, but it is now believed that he was born Moritz Rathenau in Germany in 1882, the illegitimate son of Emil Rathenau, the founder of AEG and Helen Mareck, an Irish actress. He lived for some time as Ret Marut, a merchant seaman, actor, journalist and politician, and left Germany in 1923 after having been sentenced to death for his part in the Bavarian Revolution. He arrived in Mexico in 1924, where he dedicated himself to writing full time. Traven married Rosa Elena Luján in 1957 and died in Mexico City in 1969.

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