I guess you’re looking for non-fiction, right? Thing is though, most all the books written about such things over the past 60 years or so tend to be highly speculative (and so, fictional); though I do believe in very recent years more facts and scientifically plausible scenarios have been realized or discovered about those two specific mysteries you mentioned (sorry, but I don’t have links to those past news or scientific reports handy at the moment).
However, if you don’t mind some speculative entertainment about such things, Clive Cussler’s NUMA related books may have a lot to offer you. The author did well enough financially to fund some expeditions to reveal the truth about some real life historical maritime mysteries himself (and published a book or two about that as well I think), but is mainly famous for his fictional maritime government agency NUMA, and its heroic personnel saving the world over and over again, while also solving maritime mysteries from history and prehistory, some of them real ones you’ll find mentioned in wikipedia, and some made up by the author. I’ve read close to all his novels, and believe he may have offered his own perspective on the Triangle and Celeste among their pages (though since he has about 60 books, dang if I can recall specific titles to go with those).
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I guess you’re looking for non-fiction, right? Thing is though, most all the books written about such things over the past 60 years or so tend to be highly speculative (and so, fictional); though I do believe in very recent years more facts and scientifically plausible scenarios have been realized or discovered about those two specific mysteries you mentioned (sorry, but I don’t have links to those past news or scientific reports handy at the moment).
However, if you don’t mind some speculative entertainment about such things, Clive Cussler’s NUMA related books may have a lot to offer you. The author did well enough financially to fund some expeditions to reveal the truth about some real life historical maritime mysteries himself (and published a book or two about that as well I think), but is mainly famous for his fictional maritime government agency NUMA, and its heroic personnel saving the world over and over again, while also solving maritime mysteries from history and prehistory, some of them real ones you’ll find mentioned in wikipedia, and some made up by the author. I’ve read close to all his novels, and believe he may have offered his own perspective on the Triangle and Celeste among their pages (though since he has about 60 books, dang if I can recall specific titles to go with those).