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Shocking trivia

Yzzim

Lifer
I use some random factoids to bump my threads in fs/ft and just found this one that kinda shocked me:

Fourteen years before the Titanic sailed on an April day in 1912 on her maiden voyage from Southampton to New York, a novel titled "Futility" was published about an unsinkable and glamorous Atlantic liner, the largest in the world. Like the Titanic, the fictional vessel was triple-screw and could make 24-25 knots; at 800 feet, it was a little shorter than the Titanic, but at 70,000 tons, its displacement was 4,000 tons greater. Like the Titanic's, its passenger list was the creme de la creme and there were not enough lifeboats on board. On a cold April night, the fictional "unsinkable" vessel strikes an iceberg and glides to the bottom of the Atlantic. The name of this liner, in the story by Morgan Robertson, was "The Titan."

Anyone got any other shocking trivia?
 
This is stupid. Its like taking 9/11 and then looking for a published book and pointing to it and saying, "Look someone predicted it!"
 
Originally posted by: her209
This is stupid. Its like taking 9/11 and then looking for a published book and pointing to it and saying, "Look someone predicted it!"

Um, yeah, but no one wrote a book about that because it was so far fetched, no one thought that would happen...and if they did I doubt it would happen to have the same similarities like this book "The Titan" and "The Titantic" did.
 
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