Synopsis
Suspenseful and engrossing, The Stowaway is not only an adventure story of the highest calibre, but also a meditation on the anarchic nature of life, experience and will.
On an overcast day in March, one day's journey into the Atlantic, two Romanian stowaways are found hidden on board the container ship Maersk Dubai. To the horror of the Filipino crew, the Taiwanese officers order the pair to be set adrift on a flimsy raft. In the blink of an eye they are gone -- sucked beneath the enormous ship's wake.
Weeks later, the ship's bosun, Rodolfo Miguel, finds another man, frightened and hungry, hidden in the bowels of the ship. Instead of turning him over to the ship's officers, he makes the courageous decision to hide the man, endangering not only himself but also his fellow sailors, who help him.
Miguel is a true sailor, at sea for more than half the year, miles from his wife and five children. The man he rescues is a nineteen-year-old Romanian named Daniel Pacepa, who is haunted by a violent past. The men have no shared language, but their mutual experiences of poverty, desperation -- and the will to live -- bind them together.
Excerpt from The Stowaway
To Rodolfo, it seems there is no passage of time -- not even the tiniest fraction of a second -- between the existence of the stowaways and the non-existence of the stowaways. They are there, and then, simply, they are not, the flimsy raft sucked under by the big ship's wake. Rodolfo stands perfectly still, gaping not so much at the alacrity with which two men ceased to be, but at the impeccable ease with which evil appeared out of salty vapour, and claimed for itself theMaersk Dubai.
Publishers Weekly
In 1996, nine Filipino crewmen of the Maersk Dubai jumped ship in Halifax, reporting that the ship's Taiwanese officers had murdered three Romanian stowaways. Hough (The Final Confession of Mabel Stark) draws on contemporaneous news reports, court proceedings, interviews with some of the crewmen and his own empathy and exceptional narrative intuition to tell this story of cruelty and courage, crafting not only a maritime adventure but also a resonant, timely morality tale. In the haunting opening chapter, pious Filipino bosun Rodolfo Miguel watches as two stowaways whom he sought to help are set adrift in the cold Atlantic at the orders of the container ship's Taiwanese officers. Hough juxtaposes the efforts of Rodolfo and the rest of the primarily Filipino crew to do the right thing in the tragedy's aftermath with the odyssey of Daniel, a down-and-out Romanian youth desperate to make it to America. Though Daniel and his friend Gheorghe have no connection to the deceased pair, their parallel circumstances make it easy to see where their story is going, as, in a spiral of setbacks, the two move inexorably closer to the Maersk Dubai. Though the valiant Filipinos will risk everything to protect these new stowaways, their fate is far from assured. This is a moving, haunting novel, full of deeply sympathetic portraits of common people being uncommonly brave. Agents, Jackie Kaiser and Nicole Winstanley. (Sept.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.