Richard Adams.
Because DJ is black. ....and because at the end they sail away on a raft. Hence 'water ship' going down.
Brian David Bruns is a travelogue author. He wrote Cruise Confidential: A Hit Below the Water Line. The book describes the harsh working conditions for crew on various cruise ships. He also wrote Ship for Brains and Unsinkable Mr. Brown.
"The Ship of Destiny" is a fantasy novel written by Robin Hobb. It is the third book in the Liveship Traders Trilogy, which follows the lives of several characters as they become intertwined with the fate of a sentient ship called Vivacia.
A ship's draft, or how deep it sits in the water, is determined by factors like the ship's weight, buoyancy, and the density of the water. The deeper the draft, the lower the ship sits in the water. The ship will sink until it displaces an amount of water equal to its weight, which is known as the principle of buoyancy.
The buoyancy of the ship, the cargo onboard, the state of the ship, the temperature of the water, the weight, the strength of the waves/up and down movement, etc.
Dr. Seuss wrote his first book, "And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street," while he was on a ship returning from a European vacation.
Ian Fleming did not write any of those children's books. "Watership Down" was written by Richard Adams, "The Arm of the Starfish" by Madeleine L'Engle, and "The Secret Garden" by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Ian Fleming is best known for creating the character James Bond in the spy novels.
water displacement
A ship stays afloat as long as the buoyant force pushing up on the ship's hull is greater than the force of gravity pulling the ship down. This buoyant force is generated by the displaced water and is proportional to the weight of the water the ship displaces.
A ship experiences forces such as propulsion from its engines, resistance from the water it moves through, buoyancy that keeps it afloat, and gravity that pulls it down. These forces work together to determine the ship's motion and stability on the water.
Iron ships float in water because of their hollow structure, which displaces enough water to generate a buoyant force greater than the weight of the ship. This buoyant force counteracts the force of gravity pulling the ship down, allowing it to float on the surface of the water.
the waves travel through water, but they do not carry the water with them. The ship moves up and down as the wave passes under it. The ship does not travel with the wave!