During a Force 10 storm in the Irish Sea in 1979 the Nicholson 30 yacht, Grimalkin competing in the Fastnet Race, was abandoned by three of her crew following innumerable knockdowns and the loss of her skipper David Sheahan overboard witnessed by his teenage son Matt, 17. Matt, Mike Doyle, and Dave Wheeler took to the liferaft and were rescued by helicopter an hour later. Two other crewmen Nick Ward and Gerry Winks, believed to be dead, remained slumped unconscious in the cockpit. Winks did later perish, but Ward was rescued also by helicopter.
Nick Ward has now, 27 years later, written an account of his ordeal: Left for Dead. Unfortunately the tome is a half book. The unwritten half is the account of those who chose the liferaft over the yacht. Had the publisher ensured the book include this trio's side of the story the reader would discover that Ward would probably have also died without the liferaftees' insistence the Royal Navy helicopter, now armed with her accurate position, go back out and find Grimalkin.
Unfortunately Ward is assisted in his work by novelist and dramatist Sinead O'Brien whose first venture into non-fiction, Left for Dead is. In trying to create a Touching the Void-style epic the book is, alas, more void than touching. It is a melodramatic and at times contrived narrative. One example: skipper Sheahan is 'quoted' as saying 'Over and out' to his wife on the VHF. A phrase last heard on the rubber lips of a Thunderbird puppet.





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May 04 17:40
Dave Buck
Perhaps it will always be a "half book" unless you interview everybody that took part in that race? This is one man's recollection of the events and an insight of what went through one very frightened person's mind when he thought he was about to die. He can be forgiven for presenting it in a readable form and he does make it clear that these are just his version of the events. If use of the phrase "over and out" is the best example of it being "contrived" then it bodes pretty well for the book. I thought it was an excellent and compelling read and approached it with an open mind as to the other survivors' recall of events.