Used price: $0.31
Collectible price: $7.00
Buy one from zShops for: $11.00
This is not a sailing book -- it is a detective story about what pressure and isolation can do to the human mind. The authors do a wonderful job of assembling and presenting the evidence.
It doesn't matter at all that you know the complete story before you start: A guy's marriage and business ventures are in shambles; he hoodwinks a town into building him a bad plywood trimaran for an around-the-world race; he gets scared and fakes everything by staying in the Atlantic and sailing in circles; he goes nuts and walks overboard.
An amazing study of the human mind under pressure -- I commend the authors.
This book will shake you up. The necessary antidote is "The Long Way" by Bernard Moitessier, a lyrical story about the same race by the man who was winning it, but was so raptured by the Deep that he forfeited the prize and just kept on sailing...
List price: $12.95 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $9.40
Buy one from zShops for: $8.89
It is a deceptively simple story, but packed with thoughts and observations which are thoroughly relevant today. And it is written in a style which came BEFORE the present supermediatic hyperbolic overstatement that characterizes most of what we read and hear today.
It is an excellent gift, and an inspirational work, even if you are never planning to cross an ocean. It is in a word, a classic. (And it is wonderful to think about how these places actually were in the thirties, and to listen to proper nautical language and vocabulary which has been washed away by the advent of the jet plane and skidoo.. Bon voyage!
List price: $12.95 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $9.40
Buy one from zShops for: $8.82
It struck me as a very honest account without a lot of making things sound more impressive than they actually are. He talks a bit about getting sick on board, but he accepts that as just part of the challenge. He also talks about getting a tiny bit careless after going so far around the world, and getting put ashore in what must have appeared to be a "novice" mistake. At that point, he was ANYTHING but a novice. It's just the kind of thing that might happen to any one of us, which is exactly what makes this book so appealing to me.
If you want to escape from your land-locked life for a few hours with a good book, consider this one strongly. The chapters are generally fairly short, and the pages turn quickly, because he really draws you in with his writing style. His description of his experience with the waves in the South Pacific still has me spellbound.
I will read this book again and again over the years.
List price: $19.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $2.98
Buy one from zShops for: $13.07
Used price: $0.80
Collectible price: $5.29
Buy one from zShops for: $1.95
Jonathan Raban decides to sail around the English coast and, in the process, teaches himself navigation and buys a old wooden sailing boat.
The author has an excellent perspective on the whole ethos of sailing and the drama that is involved - particularly if sailing single-handed. This is combined with a highly penetrative insight into the English character and beautiful descriptions of the various small ports and towns that he visits on his trip.
Perhaps the two highlights of the book are Raban's encounters with Paul Theroux and Philip Larkin. It is very rare to encounter an author with such a sublime sense of humour and these are just two passages amongst many that make this book a 'must read' for any reader.
Used price: $1.67
Collectible price: $10.56
Buy one from zShops for: $6.95
Used price: $4.60
Collectible price: $15.88
Buy one from zShops for: $9.90
Used price: $6.49
Its ten chapters about 'London living' take salmon-leaps of imaginative narrative prose style along the way; its young author's masterly, breathtaking skill fizzing with youth, verve and enthusiasm.
How London ( and possibly the author,too) have changed since 1973/74. It's a glitzier place now. A Class A city - a contender-
up there with Sydney,Tokyo and New York.
Happily, the 'Envies'have long gone, replaced now by crack-cocaine - fuelled muggers. Plus ca change. In the nineteenth century, men wore steel hoops under their starched collars to protect themselves from gangs of garotters. Darker perils await today.
London has survived Thatcherism,Majorism and Blairism, and today's lavishly-talented, hard-working, well-mannered thirty-year-olds, who contribute so much to London life such as my son( gifted artist/award-winning designer/skilled musician/fine lyricist) and his girlfriend have both still managed to hang on to the left-wing visions and ideals of Raban's generation - in the face of massive social and technological change.
London has emerged from the shabby, grubby shadows of its Victorian past, and has now become reconstructed into a glittering, vibrant place, rebuilt and refurbished as in the time of Wren and Nash ( Georgian London's master-planner). How symbolic that Foster's' Millennium' bridge links St.Paul's to Tate Modern ; and how intriguing it would be to read what the inestimable Mr Raban thinks of London in 2003.
Used price: $3.25
Collectible price: $7.41
He is an accomplished observer, capable of peering beyond the surface to uncover what lies beneath. The book's opening, in which Raban describes his sea voyage from Liverpool to New York, is particularly entertaining. So, too, his sojourn in Alabama where he provides gleeful commentary on the irony of a town embracing provincialism whilst stuggling with worldy challenges. I was tempted to award this book 5 stars, but it simply doesn't measure up to other Raban efforts. All the same, it is an excellent selection on anyone's reading list.
Devoid of any attempt to overanalyze, the authors start this book with an account of Crowhurst's early years. The daredevil character that is portrayed is well in line with a personality that would feel challenged by an impossible task like the one facing Crowhurst later. On top of that, the recurrent theme of a person breaking into new territory to leave tangled situations behind gives an important clue to his behavior under the stress of his sailing voyage.
Having burned his bridges and created a presumed win or lose all situation, Crowhurst sets out ill-prepared on a partially finished boat, that has already shown clear design flaws and was put together in too much of a hurry. Rather than face obvious defeat Crowhurst chooses the risk and the impossible mission of sailing around the world. Although he initially tries to make the most of the situation, he soon realizes that he will not win the race and possibly not survive a trip through the rough waters beyond the Cape. In a Shakespearean 'to be or not to be situation' this Hamlet decides to perpetrate fraud rather than admitting failure. Making up false nautical positions along the way and forced to radio silence not to give away true position, Cowhurst never leaves the Atlantic Ocean, makes some repairs in Argentina and bides his time while some competitors drop out or make real progress. Ending up in winning position Crowhurst turns himself in a real life Raskolnikov and philosophizes himself into madness and ultimately suicide.
Especially, since the approach in this book is entirely journalistic, analytical and objective this story gives a rare detailed 'play-by-play' account of someone going of the deep end. Based on a twisted interpretation of a line in Einstein's own book on Relativity, decent skills in mathematics and analytical reasoning and quite a bit of creativity, Crowhurst sets his mind on a track that degenerates in self destruction. While this is in no way the first account of advancing psychopathology, both Crowhurst isolation and hardships and the impossible task he has set himself make this a heart wrenching story. Thanks to the excellent introduction there is ample indication that both Crowhurst nurture and nature on the one hand, and Mother Nature on the other, provided him with a challenge he failed to meet.
Thanks to the journalistic approach and excellent writing this story is still gripping in a world whose technical advances have made a repetition of Crowhurst's attempt at pulling a fast one all but impossible. Thus, the portrayal of the sailor's slow mental degradation competes with the very best accounts in fiction.