Page 24 of The White Voyage


  With no means of communication with the outside world and no hope of rescue, passengers and crew must find a way to survive. In the scramble for power that ensues, the distinction between master and servant becomes meaningless as the more ruthless among them clamber to the top.

  The inscrutable Sweeney, meanwhile, sits alone on a hillside. Coolly aloof, he watches the veneer of civilization disintegrate as his fellows fall prey to fear, desperation, barbarity …

  As for Silver Island itself, with its lush vegetation and exotic fruits, it had seemed like paradise. But as the days pass, a subtle sense of unease gains momentum, and the realisation gradually dawns that all is far from well in this tropical Eden.

  Published by The SYLE Press 2015

  First published in Great Britain in 1960

  by Eyre & Spottiswoode as The Long Voyage

  First published in the USA in 1961

  by Simon & Schuster as The White Voyage

  Copyright © John Christopher 1960

  No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without prior permission from the Publisher.

  All rights reserved

  Cover design by David Drummond

  ISBN 978-0-9927686-5-2

  www.thesylepress.com

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  John Christopher, The White Voyage

 


 

 
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