For more information and a short documentary about him click HERE.
http://skullsinthestars.com/2010/02/02/which-winston-churchill-wrote-man-overboard/
“Man Overboard!” appeared in The Harmsworth Magazine at a turning point of Churchill’s career. He had been in the military since 1895; he resigned in 1899 and had his first run for political office that same year.
The story is marvelously short, just as it is marvelously uncanny. Despite its brevity, it presents amazingly complex questions concerning the character of nature, the problem of evil, and the nature of God. Although one opinion concerning the story’s tone and the narrator’s final observation may seem more likely than others, each remains a possibility, and God may not be the sadist he at first appears to be. Death by shark would be horrible, to be certain, but would drowning be any quicker, more merciful, or dignified? On the other hand, if God exists, maybe he is as capricious and even as sadistic as the story can be interpreted to imply. For that matter, why did the man fall overboard?
To universalize the question, we might ask, instead, Why did humanity, in the Garden of Eden, take a similar fall? Is there a grace behind both “falls,” discernable only to the eye of faith, as Job suggests? Is the fall overboard a test of one’s trust in God, even when one faces his own mortality? Is the story a repudiation of the very idea of a merciful and loving God? Is he, instead, merely just and inscrutable? Does he exist at all?
http://skullsinthestars.com/2010/02/02/which-winston-churchill-wrote-man-overboard/
http://writinghorrorfiction.blogspot.com.es/2009/04/man-overboard-questioning-nature-and.html
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