The true story of history's greatest naval disaster - the destruction of Khubilai Khan's immense armada, the largest fleet the world had ever seen, by a legendary act of divine intervention- the kamikaze.
The President of the Institute of Nautical Archaeology, James
Delgado is a marine
archaeologist who has led and investigated shipwreck expeditions
around the world. The author or editor of thirty books, when not
travelling the world for the INA in quest of lost ships, he lives
on the waterfront in Vancouver.
James Delgado does a splendid job as a cultural historian in
showing how the legend of a brave but doomed defence, supported by
the intervention of the gods, shaped national identity over seven
centuries
*Tablet*
Dredging not only the sea but also historical records, Delgado
tells us something new - some of it speculative but most of it
richly authentic - about a great nautical adventure
*The Times*
Engaging and highly readable
*Guardian*
One finishes the book ready to strap on mask and tanks to dive for
the buried remains of the shops that still hold more Mongol
secrets
*Times Literary Supplement*
Delgado's knowledge of water and his archaeological passion for
retrieving what history has scattered across sea beds from San
Francisco to Vietnam
*Literary Review*
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