Book without much interest, which reads, of course, when you're a fan of Pendergast and Preston. But reading is difficult and unpleasant given the staggering number of printing mistakes and strikes. Some sentences are truncated. Missing words. Some are bonded, forming a magma unreadable and incomprehensible ... As for the content of the book, frankly improbable story will not leave me an indelible memory. All's Well That Ends Well for the Britania and multi-millionaires passengers. The wicked are punished, fortunately. Some poor souls defenseless passing by the brunt of the wrath of the "killer", but here it's mandatory if you want a little suspense and above all that history is a semblance of foundation! Question to ask: Are you sure Pendergast is really a key figure in this book ..........? I look after. Inevitably, there will be one, since Diogenes confessed to Aloysius ......