

Clive Cussler discovered more than sixty shipwrecks. His most famous find came in 1995 when his non-profit organization, NUMA, located the Confederate submarine H.L. Hunley, lost since 1864. He financed these expeditions with the enormous success of his adventure novels, which sold over 100 million copies in more than forty languages. Cussler often blurred the lines between his fiction and reality, inserting his own persona as a character and using novel research to guide actual searches. A common misunderstanding is that he was merely a popular writer; in truth, his maritime archaeology work led to the official designation of several National Historic Sites. His dual legacy endures through restored shipwrecks in museums and a continuous flow of new thrillers from a franchise that outlives him.
1928–1945
Born between the Depression and the end of WWII. Too young to fight, old enough to remember. They became the conformist middle managers of the 1950s — and the civil rights leaders who quietly dismantled Jim Crow.
Clive was born in 1931, placing them squarely in The Silent Generation. The events that shaped this generation — world wars, depression, and rapid industrialization — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 1931
#1 Movie
Frankenstein
Best Picture
Cimarron
The world at every milestone
The Empire State Building opens as the world's tallest
Jesse Owens wins four golds at the Berlin Olympics
D-Day: Allied forces land at Normandy
India gains independence; the Dead Sea Scrolls found
NATO founded; Mao proclaims the People's Republic of China
Queen Elizabeth II ascends the throne
Yuri Gagarin becomes the first human in space
Voting age lowered to 18 in the US
MTV launches; first Space Shuttle flight; AIDS identified
Soviet Union dissolves; World Wide Web goes public
September 11 attacks transform the world
Osama bin Laden killed; Arab Spring sweeps the Middle East
COVID-19 pandemic shuts down the world
“Adventure is where you find it, usually at the bottom of the sea.”