The Grain Ship (1914) is a collection of short stories by Morgan Roberston. Published a year before the authors death, The Grain Ship compiles works of short fiction originally published in Harpers Monthly, New Story Magazine, and The Sunday Magazine. The ten stories of The Grain Ship showcase Robertsons skill for yarn-spinning while benefitting from his experience as a merchant sailor. Dining alone at an upscale restaurant, an old sailor overhears an intriguing conversation at the next table over. He listens as a retired sea captain discusses the discovery off the coast of Spain of a merchant ship abandoned and overrun with rats. Intrigued at first, the sailor soon remembers an encounter nearly three decades old. While making his way across Arizona as a cattle driver, thinking of nothing more than returning to sea, he meets a stranger in distress with a faded anchor tattooed on his arm. Taking him to his shelter, he realizes the stranger has lost his memory, that he has no idea of who or where he is. When a rat runs across the floor of the shelter, he suddenly remembers his experience on a grain ship bound from San Francisco, a disastrous voyage on which the whole crewsave for himselfdisappeared. The Grain Ship is a tale of terror, illness, and doom on the high seas by an author whose experience as a sailor serves him well. Collected in this volume are nine more stories published during Morgan Robertsons brief yet productive career as a professional writer, including From the Darkness and the Depths, Noahs Ark, and The Argonauts. With a beautifully designed cover and professionally typeset manuscript, this edition of Morgan Robertsons The Grain Ship is a classic work of American fiction reimagined for modern readers.
Morgan Robertson (1861-1915) was an American novelist and short story writer. Born into a seafaring family, Robertson entered the merchant service as a teenager, rising to the rank of first mate by the time of his departure in 1886. With his sailing days behind him, Robertson studied jewelry making and worked in New York City as a diamond setter for 10 years. During this time, he also wrote sea stories and novels, including Futility, or the Wreck of the Titan (1898), a novel with a striking similarity to the sinking of the Titanic in 1912. Despite seeing his work published in McClures and the Saturday Evening Post, Robertson failed to make a living as a professional writer, leading to a deep dissatisfaction also fueled by the authors claims to have not received credit for his invention of the submarine periscope. Despite his lack of popular success and critical acclaim, Robertsons work is thought to have influenced such writers as Edgar Rice Burroughs and Henry De Vere Stacpoole.