Three quarters of the earth’s surface is covered by water, an expanse so vast and deep, the power of tides and waves so immense, it is hard to imagine that we tiny creatures can have any impact on it at all.
But Syd Stapleton’s latest novel gives a chilling portrayal of the damage already done to the oceans — and the ongoing destruction — by humans, the result of the greed of corporations and the governments that serve them. Millions of tons of petroleum byproducts and millions of gallons of sewage every year; a garbage truck full of plastic every day and tons of heavy metals from industrial wastes; 200,000 barrels of radioactive waste sitting at the bottom of the North Atlantic… the list goes on.
The Six Mile Circle: A Sea Story is fiction. But what Stapleton presents is very real — and well researched. He draws on his own experience at sea to paint a detailed picture of the life of a mariner.
BOOK REVIEW
This novel follows the adventures of seaman Frank Tomasini first encountered in Troubled Waters, Stapleton’s first book.
In The Six Mile Circle, Tomasini works as a deckhand on an ocean-going tug, hauling barges of agricultural chemicals from the mainland to Hawaii.
As Tomasini sleuths the death of a shipmate, he gets schooled in the pollution of the seas, the agencies that are supposed to regulate waste disposal, and the criminals that function far out of the reach — and mostly off the radar — of those whose job is to police this activity.
“Stapleton’s new novel offers a unique cocktail of maritime drama and social commentary,” wrote Alan Wald, author of Writing from the Left. “Stream-lined and tense, it’s a sea story and suspense tale with a political activist’s beating heart. As portents of a toxic dumping mystery come to the fore with a grim inevitability, a radical anticapitalist critique of environmental despoliation emerges like an underpainting. The Six Mile Circle is a narrative in direct conversation with our own moment of impending environmental catastrophe.”
The review below by David J. Brown first appeared December 10, 2025, on DJB’s blog “More to Come…” We are publishing it for the information of our readers, and to encourage anyone interested to buy and read Stapleton’s new fascinating novel. The headline, text, and photos below are from the original.
— World-Outlook editors
*
December 10, 2025
Greed, corruption, and the ongoing degradation of the only earth we have
Written by DJB
Syd Stapleton packs a lot of truth into his newest fictional tale of Frank Tomasini and the Molly B.
When last we met Frank Tomasini, he was living on an old wooden boat among the San Juan Islands working through an environmental disaster and cover-up wrapped in a whodunit. For the sequel our hero has traded the San Juans for the open ocean and a fishing troller for a barge, but the criminal behavior and Frank’s need to dig for the truth remain.
The Six Mile Circle: A Sea Story (2025) by Syd Stapleton continues the adventures of Frank Tomasini and the Molly B that we first met in Troubled Waters. Frank’s marine surveyor’s business has fallen on hard times because of the revenge exacted by one of the principals from the earlier story. To make ends meet, Frank has signed on as a deckhand and cook on ocean-going tugboats and barges making runs between the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii. These barges are loaded with freight along with some unexpected cargo. When one of the hulls is mysteriously pumped out in the middle of the ocean, a fellow deckhand gets sick and ultimately dies after contact. Frank knows he has to get to the bottom of this mystery.
Several of the characters from Stapleton’s first novel return for the sequel. Besides Frank we have his live-in lover Carol Bogdanich, as their relationship moves into a more mature period; Frank’s long-time friend Harlan Brown; and Harlan’s new companion Agnes Middleton. Harlan — who is Frank’s best friend — was the former owner of Frank’s 1937 wooden salmon troller the Molly B. He restored the boat and is now taking care of it while Frank’s away for the long trips across the Pacific.
As deckhand/cook, Frank would be alternating, month-on, month-off with Annie Karp, a small but vigorous woman. When they first meet, she wants to make sure Frank understands that, unlike the Alaska runs he trained on with his new employer, there were no stops along the way between the Northwest and Hawaii. She also warns him that the mate on his coming trip — Steve Rosset — was “an a**hole.” That proved to be an understatement.
Annie is on a trip when she’s enlisted to help pump what the skipper said was water that had leaked into a compartment of the hull of one of the barges. It turns out it is some “kind of smelly, cloudy sh*t” that sprays on Annie when a hose breaks free. Long story short, she is kept on the tugboat and instead of flying her home to the mainland once they reach Hawaii, the company insists they bring her back on the return trip. A few days later she has died in the hospital and the shipping company — a relatively new LLC with somewhat mysterious ties to agribusiness — works to keep it under wraps. Rosset seems to be the only one in the know.
In 245 pages, Frank works with Carol, Harlan, Agnes, several of the deckhands, and some environmental government agents and academics to uncover the truth behind the scheme. An unexpected and fast paced ending brings some measure of justice, but it also speaks to the enormity of the challenge. As one reviewer notes, the environmental crime Frank uncovers “mixes fiction with uncomfortable fact.” Although this is a work of fiction, Stapleton notes, “the facts and figures related to agricultural and other chemicals have been carefully researched, and they are not, sadly, fiction.”
The Six Mile Circle packs a lot of truth into this tale of greed, political corruption, and the ongoing degradation of the only earth we have.
More to come . . .
DJB
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Categories: Art & Culture
Thanks for posting this! In my opinion Syd Stapleton’s THE SIX MILE CIRCLE is a worthy addition to a long tradition of radicals using popular forms–including action-adventure novels, tough-guy and murder mysteries, detective and science fiction–to dramatize socialist concerns as a means to reach a broader public. At the least these go back to THE JUNGLE and MARTIN EDEN, but some of the most successful were Communists (Mike Quin, author of THE BIG STRIKE, who as “Robert Finnegan” published THE BANDAGED NUDE, MANY A MONSTER, etc.), Leonard Zinberg (who as “Ed Lacy” wrote IN BLACK AND WHITEY, LEAD WITH YOUR LEFT, etc.), Vera Caspary, Jim Thompson, Howard Fast (as “E. V. Cunningham”), and many more. During and then after the 1960s, there were lots of New Left novels of this type–Gordon Demarco’s OCTOBER HEAT (a murder mystery set at the time of the 1934 Longshore strike), Katherine Forrest’s THE BEVERLY MALIBU (lesbian detective dealing with the murder of a “friendly witness” from the Hollywood HUAC investigations), Walter Mosley’s THE RED DEATH (a Jewish Communist union organizer during the McCarthy era witch hunt). The most famous Left-wing science fiction writers were, of course, THE FUTURIANS (Frederik Pohl, Isaac Asimov)–mostly connected with the CP-USA but Judith Merrill (b. Josephine Grossman) had a Trotskyist background.