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Winter Reading List

Posted: Sat Jan 31, 2015 5:46 am
by Tenacious
Hey all,

With the :tat26: stuck under several inches of snow, I thought now would be a good time to read some sailing literature while I wait for spring.

Do any of you have suggestions on good sailing books to read? I'm interested in any sailing related topics including but not limited to - Biographies, Instructional, History, Navigation, Racing, Ports of Call, Weather, Safety etc. If it has to do with sailing, I'm interested.

Thanks,
Robert

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Sat Jan 31, 2015 8:10 am
by yukonbob
"Read" chapmans piloting. Good book.

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Sat Jan 31, 2015 3:52 pm
by sirlandsalot
"South" the Shackleton story from Antarctica.....mind blowing true story.

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Sat Jan 31, 2015 4:57 pm
by Chinook
Best book I've read in a while is Boys in the Boat, about crew racing in the early 1930's, and a crew from the University of Washington which made history. The story is kind of a cross between Chariots of Fire and Seabiscuit. Great story and I really hope someone turns it into a movie.

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Sat Jan 31, 2015 5:45 pm
by Starscream
"Chesepeake" by James Michener.

Interesting American historical fiction with a fair amount of sailing. I have an extra copy I can "swap meet" to anyone who wants to pay shipping.

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Sun Feb 01, 2015 7:23 am
by Tomfoolery
I have, and periodically reread, all of the Horatio Hornblower books. Good stories, lots of nautical stuff (as one might guess), and an interesting looks into the hard life of officers and crew of the British Navy in the late 1700's and early 1800's.

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Sun Feb 01, 2015 7:48 am
by dlandersson
Ditto the Hornblower series. :)
Tomfoolery wrote:I have, and periodically reread, all of the Horatio Hornblower books. Good stories, lots of nautical stuff (as one might guess), and an interesting looks into the hard life of officers and crew of the British Navy in the late 1700's and early 1800's.

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Sun Feb 01, 2015 8:05 pm
by Dirko
If you are looking for a technical read, I'd recommend a couple by Marchaj:

Seaworthiness - the forgotten factor. Good read that gives the history of yacht design and how the racing rules have influenced design - not necessarily for the best. A good study in boat stability and the factors that influence it.
Sailing Theory and Practice. Teaches the fundamentals of sail aerodynamics.


Image

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Mon Feb 02, 2015 9:59 am
by Y.B.Normal
Taken from this month's "GOOD OLD BOAT" Magazine:

Favorite books

We have no book reviews this month so we asked one of our favorite novelists, Bill Hammond (http://www.bill-hammond.com/), what five books he's read in the last few years, other than his own Cutler Family Chronicles series, that he would recommend to Good Old Boat readers. Here's his list:

Sea Witch by Helen Hollick (Silverwood Books, 2011)

London born and bred, Helen Hollick is one of the most prolific writers of the British perspective during the Age of Sail. In this novel, protagonist Jeremiah Acorne serves as a captain of a pirate ship and lives up to his billing as a swashbuckling man of the sea. In her descriptive and unique style, Ms. Hollick draws the reader irresistibly into the Golden Age of Piracy in a way that is oddly moving.

Until the Sea Shall Give Up Her Dead by S. Thomas Russell (Penguin, 2014)

This novel is the fourth volume in the Charles Hayden series. In the late 18th century, Hayden, a Royal Navy officer, is sent to the Caribbean where a hodgepodge of conflicting British, French, and Spanish interests interact with revolutionaries and pirates. As always, Russell's style is disciplined and engaging; one can almost smell the salt of the sea air blended with the acrid stench of spent gunpowder.

Surfmen by C.T. Marshall (Fireship Press, 2013)

As a young boy, the protagonist is rescued at sea off the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Thirty years later, a decade after the close of the Civil War, this same young man, grown to manhood, launches The Cape Hatteras Station of the U.S. Lifesaving Service, and battles the treachery of the infamous Diamond Shoals and that of his crew.

Across a Moonlit Sea by Marsha Canham (Amazon, 2011)

A rollicking good sea saga set in Elizabethan England, this novel, the first in a trilogy, features a pack of privateers, known as sea hawks, who band together to protect their island and their queen from the ravages of the Grand Armada being assembled in Spain by King Phillip II. Included in the riotous action is a raid on Cadiz led by the Pirate Wolf Simon Dante and Sir Francis Drake.

The Sea Was Always There by Joseph Callo (Fireship Press, 2012)

In this autobiographical work, retired Rear Admiral Joseph Callo writes about what the sea has meant to him and especially what it has taught him, from his earliest recollections on Cape Cod and Jones Beach, through two years of distinguished service in the U.S. Navy, to sailing adventures in exotic waters worldwide. Everyone who has ever had a love affair with the sea will see himself or herself in these pages.


I'm reading IMPACT by Douglas Preston (Forge Book, Tom Doherty Associates, LLC, 2009)

It's a new frontier thriller involving the CIA, a meteor, the daughter of a lobster fisherman, and NASA scientists. It's an interesting, quick read.

Good reading.

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Mon Feb 02, 2015 10:15 am
by Tenacious
Thanks all for the recommendations, I really appreciate it. The only book on the list that I've read (so far) is the Shackleton book and I agree with the poster, it's a great story!

-Robert

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Tue Feb 03, 2015 1:01 am
by trevandcal
This is a great read:

Tristan Jones - The Incredible Journey

In a salty, slashing style, Tristan Jones unfolds his extraordinary saga--a six year voyage during which he a covered a distance equal to twice the circumference of the world--revealing both a rich sense of history an insuppressible Welsh wit. With a singleness of purpose as ferocious as nay hazard he encountered, Tristan Jones would not give up--even after dodging snipers on the Red Sea, capsizing off the Cape of Good Hope, starving in the Amazon, struggling for 3,000 miles against the mightiest sea current in the world, and hauling his boat over the rugged Andes three miles above sea level to find at last the legendary Island of the Sun. And beyond lay te most awesome challenge of all--the tortuous trek through 6,000 miles of uncharted rivers to find his way back to the ocean.

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Tue Feb 03, 2015 10:29 am
by captaingreg
Airborne by William F. Buckley, Jr. Written in the 70's about a transatlantic trip with friends and his son. Interesting back-stories, sailing, humor and father/son relationship. I read it about every other year.

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Tue Feb 03, 2015 11:51 am
by FishyFabs
I enjoyed The sail of two idiots! Learn what it is like to sell everything to buy a boat and live on the hook in the Caribbean. The sailors were complete novices and learned some valuable lessons. It was an easy read and recommended for any person contemplating such an adventure. Link http://asailoftwoidiots.blogspot.ca

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Tue Feb 03, 2015 12:12 pm
by Y.B.Normal
Other books I've read this winter (It's L-O-N-G here in Wisconsin.) are:

Racing Through Paradise by William F. Buckley, Jr. This is about his Pacific Passage.

The Voyage of Sea Lion by Will Corry. Published by WW Norton & Co., Inc. in 1978. A true sea adventure about an actor-writer and his three-year-old daughter on a voyage across the Pacific Ocean.

Re: Winter Reading List

Posted: Sun Feb 15, 2015 12:20 pm
by Gazmn
I'll list some of what's nautical in my Kindle Library:

"Rich Johnson's Guide to Trailer Boat Sailing".

"Buy, Outfit & Sail" by Capn Fatty Goodlander + Any and all other Cap'n Fatty's

"The Essentials of Living Aboard A Boat. Revised & Updated" By Mark Nichols - I put it down for a while - but I'll get back to it. - It's 19 degrees today...

"Radar For Mariners" & "Modern Marine Weather" by David Burch

"Across Islands & Oceans" by James Baldwin

Some are practical, some just informative & dry & Some are funny as hull.

Happy Reading :)