A beautiful illustrated history of the most exciting and compelling races and
rivalries of the clipper ship era, featuring the stories of legendary boats
such as Marco Polo and the Cutty Sark.
How did a big-game fishing trip rudely interrupted by sharks inspire one of the key scenes in Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea? How did Robert Louis Stevenson's cruise to the cannibal-infested South Sea islands prove instrumental in his writing of The Beach of Falesa and The Ebb Tide? How did Masefield survive Cape Horn and a near-nervous breakdown to write Sea Fever? The waters of this world have swirled through storytelling ever since the Celts spun the tale of Beowulf and Homer narrated The Odyssey. This enthralling book takes us on a tour of the most dangerous, exciting and often eccentric escapades of literature's sailing stars, and how these true stories inspired and informed their best-loved works. Arthur Ransome, Erskine Childers, Jack London and many others are featured as we find out how extraordinary fact fed into unforgettable fiction.
Swashbuckling adventure and lashings of champagne: this classic war story is
far removed from life in the trenches. Tasked with destroying as many British
merchant ships as possible, German aristocrat Felix von Luckner and his ship
the Seeadler succeeded in spectacular fashion, taking 14 British vessels with
the loss of only one life, in between hosting lavish parties for their
prisoners and evading the British Admiralty in a daring game of cat and mouse.
This unique and entertaining travel guide to Greek waters recreates parts of voyages undertaken in myth, anchoring off landmarks or ports associated with ancient legends. It follows the trails of Odysseus, Hercules, and Jason and the Argonauts, as well as visiting the sites where Poseidon lost his trident (off Paxos) and built his temple (on the Saronic Gulf), the cliff where Theseus's father threw himself to his death after fearing his son had been killed by the minotaur, Odysseus's ship (petrified by Poseidon and now an island in a small bay) and Troy, the remains of which survive as a reminder of the city that withstood a 10-year siege. With almost 6,000 islands in the Aegean and Ionian Seas, Greece is a maritime nation like no other – and according to its mythology this has been the case since the days when seafarers believed their fortunes, good or ill, lay in the hands of Poseidon. Sailing through these crystal clear waters today is a voyage into history, whether true or legendary. Retelling all the myths, from the very well-known to the less familiar, In the Wake of the Gods is a cruising companion to be read and enjoyed in its own right. With the author's in depth knowledge of the region, it is also packed with useful and practical pointers for pilotage and passage planning, including information about prevailing winds and anchoring, along with charts and photography.
1 The birth of transatlantic yacht racing 2 The first of the international
playboys 3 Captain Samuels: The hired gun 4 Stick, twist or bust? 5 Wild times
off the Grand Banks 6 Riders on the storm 7 Stranger than fiction 8 A stab in
the back 9 The race is won 10 What happened afterwards 11 The fate of our
heroes