The Ghost of the Mary Celeste (2104)
Valerie Martin
Doubleday
978-0385533508, 306 pages
* * *
With the exception of the Flying Dutchman, the Mary
Celeste is probably the most famous “ghost ship” of all time. Launched in
1861, the brigantine already had a long record of misfortune when Captain
Benjamin Briggs, his wife Sarah (“Sallie”), their two-year-old daughter Sophia,
and an experienced crew of seven loaded a cargo of 1700 barrels of commercial
alcohol in New York City and sailed for the Gibraltar Strait. On December 5,
1872, the abandoned ship was discovered adrift near the Azores. The cargo was nearly
intact, the ship was fully provisioned, and aside from some water damage, the Mary Celeste was completely seaworthy. There
was no sign of foul play, but one boat was missing, so what happened to her
crew? Theories abound from the fanciful (sea monsters, giant water spouts,
piracy, mass hysteria, an Atlantic earthquake) to the prosaic (alcohol fumes
that forced abandonment). Every few years someone purports to have “solved” the
mystery, but there’s enough margin for error that the legend lives on.
References to the Mary Celeste show
up everywhere–in Star Trek episodes,
in sci-fi novels, in a Stephen King story, on film, and in various books,
including Arthur Conan Doyle’s historically inaccurate J. Habakuk Jephson’s Statement, which was serialized in Cornhill Magazine in 1884.
Pardon the longwinded introduction, but many of these
elements make their way into the Valerie Martin’s fictional treatment of the Mary Celeste. Hers is a mishmash of
history, faux memoir, speculation, and invention. She mostly deals with real
historical characters, though she manufactures dialogue, circumstances, and
motives. The first third of the novel, though necessary, is confusing so hang on to the ship's rails. Martin introduces us to the blended Gibbs/Briggs family–one in
which sisters and spouses are often also first cousins. The Briggs part of the
clan suffered numerous losses at sea long before young Benjamin took command of
the Mary Celeste. In fact, the book
opens with an 1859 wreck off the North Carolina coast that drowns Benjamin’s
aunt and her sea captain husband, a foreshadowing of Benjamin’s fate and a
life-changing experience for Sallie’s 13-year-old younger sister, Hannah, who
cares for the sickly one-year-old nephew left at home.
Spring forward 13 years. Hannah has disappeared, but Sallie
is now Benjamin’s wife of three years and they (plus two-year-old Sophia) have
sailed the world together. Martin cleverly connects their final voyage aboard
the Mary Celeste and Victorian
culture. The Mary Celeste cannot
simply be an unsolved mystery within a culture as obsessed by the need to have
a “good death” as that of American Victorians. The Civil War was both blood
soaked and faith shaking in the sense that the bodies of many young men that
died far from home were never identified or recovered. Spiritualism thrived
after the war. How else would one know if Johnny died a good death if he didn’t
come marching home? Swedenborgianism, Mesmerism, and séance leaders such as
Cora Scott and the Fox sisters thrived during the late 19th century,
especially among the middle classes that often became patrons for favored
mediums. Martin asks us to consider an intriguing question. We know that most
of those purporting to commune with the dead were as crooked as a snake on hot
macadam, but does this mean all were
fakes? Can we allow for the possibility that some people are more spiritually attuned
than others, even if such individuals can’t articulate fully what or how they
apprehend? Your answer to that question will determine what you think of frail
spiritualist Violet Petra and of Phoebe Grant, the reporter who seeks to unmask
her and ends up befriending her.
Among those believing in Spiritualism and (maybe) in Ms.
Petra is Arthur Conan Doyle. Doyle–who really was a Spiritualist–populates
the novel first through contact with those who took umbrage with his
mistelling of the Mary Celeste story,
and again as an examiner of Violet Petra. In Martin’s book, Doyle is a
bourgeois boor far removed from Sherlock Holmes’ intuitive skills or Doctor
Watson’s charm. But can he, Petra, Grant, or anyone else unravel the Mary Celeste mystery?
Martin’s novel is ambitious–often overly so–and one
certainly takes a risk when assigning fictional events and thoughts to well-known
historical people. When this novel works best, Martin conjures images plucked
from Tennyson, Melville, Stephenson, and Conrad; when she misfires, the novel
drags under the weight of contrivance and turgid prose. Mostly it works because
the central mystery continues to intrigue more than 140 years after the fact.
Does Martin solve that mystery? It would be wrong of me to say.
Rob Weir
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