All Present and Accounted For Audiobook By Steven J. Craig cover art

All Present and Accounted For

The 1972 Alaska Grounding of the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Jarvis and the Heroic Efforts that Saved the Ship

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All Present and Accounted For

By: Steven J. Craig
Narrated by: Michael Goodrick
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About this listen

In November 1972, the Coast Guard Cutter Jarvis ran aground during a violent storm in Alaska, puncturing its hull, with a temporary patch applied to stop the flooding. The following day, enroute back to Honolulu, another, more vicious, storm struck; Jarvis now struggled with over 13 feet of water in their engine room and no power. The nearest ship that volunteered to assist was scheduled to arrive 30 minutes after the Jarvis officers estimated the ship would be destroyed on the rocky coastline. Wind gusts struck at 70 knots, hail and snow was falling, and at one time, Jarvis hit a swell at a 60-degree angle. This is the true story of the grounding and near-sinking of the Coast Guard's newest ship and the heroic efforts by the crew that saved the ship.

©2019 Steven J. Craig (P)2019 Steven J. Craig
Americas Military Naval Forces Solider Transportation Veteran Air Force
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What listeners say about All Present and Accounted For

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Narrative

As a former Chif Petty Officer in the U.S. Coast Guard, I found this book a fun read (listen). I found myself recalling experiences I shared with the story line on the cutters I served aboard.

I do wish a more experienced and professional narrator would have been used. This one beat the nautical terms and standard names to death.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Please find someone else to read the story

It was painful to listen to this story. The narrator mispronounced many of the words, using phonetic pronunciation instead of common terminology found in the Coast Guard and Navy.
examples included: corpsman - corpse man, boatswain mate - boat swan mate.
Lieutenant Commander - L C D R he would spell out the letters
Lieutenant JG - L T J G
And then the staccato delivery, no smooth flow.

Overall a good story that is little known today

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3 people found this helpful

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    4 out of 5 stars
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good story, narrator falls flat

fantastic story but the narrator really needed to be told how to say many nautical words.

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1 person found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

cutter Jarvis

this is a great story of heroic efforts by an entire crew to save their ship.

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Great story but needed a qualified narrator

I really enjoyed listening to this story because I myself spent 3 years serving on the USCGC Morgenthau (sister ship to Jarvis) as a Machinery Technician in the Engine Room. I could actually visualize the turmoil the crew would have endured during this causality. I would highly recommend this book to any 378 Sailor.
My only complaint would be that the narrator obviously had no background experience in the Coast Guard or Navy and so mispronounced many of the terms using phonetic pronunciation instead of common terminology found in the Coast Guard and Navy. Examples included: Corpsman - corpse man, Boatswain mate - boat swan mate, Lieutenant Commander - L C D R he would spell out the letters and Lieutenant JG - L T J G.

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2 people found this helpful

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Great book, not so good reader.

Very interesting listen; great subject matter. However, the reader should have learned how to pronounce nautical terms before starting to read the book.. The fact the reader mis-prounced even the simplest of terms was very off putting.

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Enjoyed the Story!

Really enjoyed the history. My father served in Jarvis many years ago so the ship is significant to me. Really neat to learn about the grounding incident.

The book felt a little repetitive in some of its small details and ambiguous at other details. But the overall arc of the story was good.

Narration was poor. Multiple improper pronunciations.

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Great Read/Poor Narrator

I decided to pick up the audio book and wish I had read the reviews first. Having spent time in the Coast Guard, it was painful to listen to the choppiness of his reading, not to mention the gross mispronunciation of military terms. I had to stop the audio after 1 chapter of the narration. Thankfully I had the ha d cover book so I could finish reading this book.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Horrible Pronunciation

It’s a shame that the narrator didn’t bother to learn the correct pronunciation of any of the nautical terms. It totally ruined my flow while listening to him
mangle every.single.nautical.word.

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  • Overall
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The story of Endurance from a modern day vessel

Starting in the 1890’s this polar adventure has echo of Ernest Shackleton “Endurance”.
Than moves into another modern echo of that great story with how the whole crew saved there ship with endurance, teamwork, bravery, and grit. This is written in a vivid almost screen play manner.

The only negative is that the narrator should have had a sailor teaching him how to pronounce the Nautical and Naval terms.

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