Tom Swift and his Jetmarine by Victor Appleton II
Posted in Reading Reviewed, Science Fiction at 12:00 on 28 December 2022
Sampson Low, 1954, 187 p.

Judging on the evidence of this and the previous Tom Swift book I read Appleton seems to have written his series to a template. Not a bad thing I suppose if your target market is pre-pubescent boys in the 1950s. Not so appealing to an adult 70 years on. But the cover is just so of its time I couldn’t resist it.
Here, the villains of the piece have been sinking ships in the Caribbean and Tom wants to find out who and how so as to stop them. This eventually leads him to an island off Cuba.
Again, the invention the book’s title suggests will be to the fore is not in fact deployed till late on with many diversionary incidents involving people wishing to hinder Tom in his activities. The titular jetmarine is in effect nothing more than a submarine. It’s said to have a revolutionary propulsion system drawing in water and then energising it to much greater speed. I’m still puzzled as to how that could possibly work. As written it sounds as if water goes out faster than it came in, which is impossible. Best not examine too closely.
Chef Chow appears again and I was much more struck in this “adventure” by the implicit (and most likely unconscious) racism in the writing – or at least the USian exceptionalism. I think my curiosity about Tom Swift and his inventions has now been sated.
Pedant’s corner:- “Time interval later” – or equivalent – count. At least 30.
Otherwise; “anything worth while” (worthwhile,) the jetmarine is somehow subjected to a pressure equal to a mile under the sea while in a tank in a lab. They would need a tank at least a mile deep then. “Pin point it” (Pinpoint it,) “indentifying cards” (identifying,) Jeffers’ (Jeffers’s,) “right way” (right away,) a missing quotation mark at the beginning of a piece of direct speech (x 2,) a missing quotation mark at the end of a piece of direct speech, “lightninglike” (lightning-like.)


