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Notable Little-Known Sailing Books

Christian Williams

E381 - Los Angeles
Senior Moderator
Blogs Author
For a potential project, I would like assistance in putting together a list of lesser-known sailing books.

Not Chichester, Slocum, Moitessier--but ones we may have missed.

Such as, "The Boy, Me and the Cat" by Henry Plummer. (Intracoastal, before the war)

"On the Wind of a Dream" by /Commander Victor Clark, RN (After the war)

"The Curve of Time" by M. Wylie Blanchet (not well known enough, except perhaps in Pacific Northwest).

Thanks for any favorites.
 

ignacio

Member III
Blogs Author
"Kodoku" by Kenichi Horie - Solo crossing from Japan to San Francisco in a 19 foot plywood boat.

"Alone Through The Roaring Forties" by Vito Dumas - Circumnavigates via the southern ocean....during WWII.

"At One with the Sea" by Naomi James - first woman (Brit) singlehander to circumnavigate around Cape Horn. Uses first Sailomat model to do it.

"Maiden Voyage" by Tania Aebi - first American woman (and at the time, youngest person) to circumnavigate.

Oh, and I think this got overlooked too: Teddy Seymour's solo circumnavigation in Love Song, an Ericson 35 Mk I. His account is not in book form, though it's published online here in three chapters: http://www.bluemoment.com/teddyseym...&www.bluemoment.com/teddyseymour/content.html
 
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Frank Langer

1984 Ericson 30+, Nanaimo, BC
One of my favourites is "First You Have To Row A Little Boat" by Richard Bode. It's full of simple wisdom, an easy enjoyable read. Everyone I've lent it to has loved it, and bought their own copy. :)
Frank
 

Teranodon

Member III
Christian,

Here is a long-winded response to your request. If you (or others) wish to skip the palaver, my list is at the end. The books are guaranteed to please a sailor.

Some thirty years ago, and for no particular reason that I remember, I read a book by travel writer Eric Newby, the story of his first great adventure. In 1938, fresh out of an English public (i.e., private) school, he gave up a job at an advertising agency and joined the short-handed crew of the giant steel four-masted barque “Moshulu”, bound for Australia to pick up a cargo of wheat. “The Last Grain Race” is wonderful piece of writing, complete with colorful characters, storms, fights, treachery, camaraderie - all depicted with British understatement and wry humor. But overshadowing everything in Newby’s account is the great ship herself:

Moshulu.jpg


As soon as I put down the book, I had to know more. First, I studied “Moshulu’s” history. In the days before Wikipedia, this was not so easy, but I discovered that she was built on the Clyde for a German shipper in 1904 and christened “Kurt”. At the outbreak of World War I, she was interned in Astoria, Oregon, then seized by the government when the U.S. entered the war. Her new peculiar name was chosen by none other than the wife of President Wilson. Some of Edith Wilson’s ancestors were Native Americans, and she found an “Indian” word that pleased her in the Library of Congress. It’s actually a proper noun, the ancient name of a creek in what is now New York’s Bronx district, possibly meaning “smooth stones”. In 1935, the barque was acquired by eccentric entrepreneur, Gustaf Erikson, who bought up many of the last great windjammers and sent them around the world, carrying bulk cargos out of the home port of Mariehamn in the Aland Islands between Sweden and Finland. Today, “Moshulu” is one of a handful of surviving square-riggers. Bizarrely, she can be found at Philadelphia’s Penn landing, where she has been converted into a floating restaurant! In 1973, she was towed to New York for a cameo appearance in “The Godfather, Part II”, bringing the young Vito Corleone to Ellis Island.

When I was done with “Moshulu”, I began systematically researching the history of the last iron and steel square-rigged ships. Hundreds were built in the second half of the nineteenth century and on into the twentieth, when they were finally pushed into oblivion by the power of steam. I amassed a library of some three hundred books (for all I know, it’s the most complete collection on this obscure subject, anywhere). Many of these books are fascinating technical treatises about masting, rigging and seamanship, but my most treasured ones are autobiographies authored by the captains of the great ships, written in retirement as a last wistful testament to closed era in maritime history. After reading dozens and dozens of accounts of voyages in square sail, I began to feel as though I had been reading a chapter in my own life. That’s when I knew it was time to stop.

In the meantime, and for many years as my work took me traveling around the world, my compulsive hobby sometimes put me on board the few square-rigged ships that can still be seen: the “Balclutha” in San Francisco, the lovely “Pommern” in Mariehamn, “Peking” and “Wavertree” in New York, “Bellem” in Brest, “Rickmer Rickmers” in Hamburg, “AF Chapman” in Stockholm, “Nippon Maru” in Yokohama. But the biggest thrill was briefly taking the wheel of the mighty “James Craig”, gliding majestically into Sydney Harbor with all square sails set.

So that’s my story an obsession. Since I would like it to be instructive and not just amusing, here are some favorite book titles that Forum members may wish to pick up (possibly through an Interlibrary Loan program):


“The Long Voyage” by HC DeMierre

“The Last Grain Race” by Eric Newby

“Master of the Moving Sea” by M.O. Gowland

“All Hands Aloft!” and “The Cape Horn Breed” by W.H.S. Jones

“The Life and Death of the Duchess” by Pamela Eriksson

“The Tall Ships Pass” by WLA Derby

“The Call of High Canvas” by A.A. Hurst

"Rolling Round the Horn" by Claude Muncaster

"By Way of Cape Horn" and "Grain Race" by Alan Villiers

"Under Sail" by Felix Riesenberg

"Under Sail Round Cape Horn" by Gunther Schultz (superb illustrations)


 

bgary

Advanced Beginner
Blogs Author
I'll add more as time permits, but the here's a corner of the "little known" genre: one of my favorite authors of historical fiction, Bernard Cornwell, has a number of novels set around sailing.

Wild Track, Crackdown, Sea Lord, Stormchild, Scoundrel... good reads, and he gets the sailing parts pretty right.
 

JPS27

Member III
here's another vote for "First you have to row a little boat." Love that book on life.

Recently read "All Standing: The remarkable story of the Jeanie Johnston, the legendary Irish famine ship." Interesting historical book with a family story woven in.

"My old man and the sea: A father and son sail around cape horn" was a good read many years ago.
 

Emerald

Moderator
How about, "Log of the Molly Brown". Read it back in the 70's, but basic jist is a fellow here in Annapolis knew the IRS was aftter him, so his solution was to walk down to his pier and hop on his Alberg 37 for a trip around the world. Fun story with lots of adventure, as to be expected.
 

footrope

Contributing Partner
Blogs Author
I would second the suggestion of "The Curve of Time" by M. Wylie Blanchet. No swashbuckling or hurricanes howling in the rigging, but fascinating and intrepid in its own way. The original was published in 1961, but the memoir is set much earlier, in the late 1920s and 30s. The second edition is from 1968, with a new Introduction.
 

mfield

Member III
On the cautionary side:

Adrift, Seventy-Six Days Lost at Sea by Steven Callahan

I believe this is the reason the PO had two solar stills stowed in a lazarette.
 
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Kenneth K

1985 32-3, Puget Sound
Blogs Author
On the cautionary side:

Adrift, Seventy-Six Days Lost at Sea by Steven Callahan

I believe this is the reason the PO had two solar stills stowed in a lazarette.

I was going to post this one as well. A great story. He was ultimately found; 'on Callahan's 76th day afloat in the raft, picked up by fisherman just offshore, who were drawn to him by birds hovering over the raft, which were attracted by the ecosystem that had developed around it' during his 1800 nm float across the Atlantic.

I learned about this book from an "off-topic" (but related) book called Deep Survival (Gonzales)--full of lost-at-sea, lost-in-the-woods, mountain-top-rescue, etc, "survival stories." An exploration of the physical and mental process survivors and "non-survivors" go through in such situations. A good read for anyone, but probably especially useful for anyone contemplating a long sea voyage.
 
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fool

Member III
Not as much lesser known, as much as shouldn't be forgotten: Dove - Robin Graham.

And Webb Chiles - in the present sea.
 

Rick R.

Contributing Partner
Here are a handful I had in my ipad.

Once is Enough - Miles Smeeton
Desperate Voyage - John Caldwell
The Loss of the Ship Essex Sunk by a Whale - Thomas Nickerson & Owen Chase
God forsaken Sea - Derek Lundly
Atlantic High - William F Buckley
To Boldly Go Where So Many Have Gone Before - Ron Palmer
Sailing Alone Across the Atlantic - Trevor Wilson
At the Mercy of the Sea - John Kretchmer
Sailing the Dream - John F. McGrady
Adrift - Steven Callahan
And, a book by a new guy, what’s his name? Christian Williams....? Ah yes, Alone Together
 
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Loren Beach

O34 - Portland, OR
Senior Moderator
Blogs Author
Don't forget "Unlikely Passages" by Reese Palley

The follow up book was pretty good, too.
 

toddster

Curator of Broken Parts
Blogs Author
Man, there are so many of them. And thanks to our modern world, as soon as you download one, you are helpfully presented with half a dozen more to choose from. Some, not so “notable.”
As it happens, I have just finished Peter Heibert, Lee Shore Blues: Sex, Drugs, and Bluewater Sailing. A memoir more notable for its amazing breadth than for the prose. But he finishes it up with an extensive bibliography of books that inspired him, which is a nice little bonus.

There was recently a similar thread on Sailing Anarchy about sailing books for kids. Thanks to that thread, I was reintroduced to “Sea Fever” and “The Plan for Birdsmarsh,” by K.M. Peyton, which made quite an impression on me as a tween. Though undoubtedly most of the actual sailing bits went over my head at the time. Now looking for an impressionable young person to pass them on to.

A bit off-topic, but I noticed that lots of Heibert’s bibliography has to do (as one might expect) with sailing gaff-rigged boats. Maybe I’m strange, but when I’ve sold a boat (or a car) I tend to bundle the books that go with it. E.g., my catamaran books went with my catamaran, when I sold it. It seemed natural at the time.
 

csoule13

Member III
"Sextant" by David Ogilvy Barrie.

"London Goes to Sea" by Peter Baumgartner. This is about a guy who buys a used Cape Dory 27, and his stories of cruising and refurbishing her. It got me to buy my CD 27(my old man has an Ericson and it's interesting how different they can be).
 

Rocinante33

Contributing Partner
Song of the Sirens, by Ernest K. Gann

My new book (just from Father’s Day so I cannot yet vouch for good content, but it starts pretty well)
The Art and Science of Sails, 2nd Ed., by Tom Whidden and Michael Levitt

Two Years Before the Mast, by Richard Henry Dana (1836)
 

Christian Williams

E381 - Los Angeles
Senior Moderator
Blogs Author
What marvelous forum work

Many of these books I never heard of--at my age. A wonderful bunch of knowledge bits.

I have in mind--not committed to doing it yet---a book called Now Read This, a guide to about 100 of great and/or obscure nautical books, summary reviews by me incorporating and cross pollinating ideas and sources, so that a member of the tribe could see what he has missed, and maybe be drawn to get some of them for his library, or at least to know they exist. Many will be used, since out of print.

Ernest Gann--as a former amateur pilot I can only say, is a stunning nonfiction writer: every sailor would also be riveted by his "Fate is the Hunter," about flying the line in the early days, with the astonishing crash rate of DC3s with no nav gear landing in thunderstorms and losing engines right and left. And full of unsuspecting passengers.

In Song of the Sirens, which Keith mentions, Gann buys a fishing boat in Alaska (I think) and is charmed by the frugality of the seller. Then they ride into a gale on the way home and the engine keeps sputtering and losing power. They can;t figure out what's wrong and are certain to perish. Then Gann remembers the seller. What a cheapskate he is. How he hates to spend money on anything. They are about to sink from loss of control when Gann, after this psychological review, has a suspicions and rushes to the sputtering engine room as icey seas sweep the helpless boat. The seller has set the fuel mixture extremely lean--to save gas! They change the setting, the engine roars to happy life, and they continue successfully on.

Gann's fiction--well, fiction is harder.

I do hope, selfishly, that this parade of lesser-known nautical books continues.
 
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