steve yates
Well-Known Member
Try Master Under God, and The Dark Ocean & The Light by Fred Nicholls
Surely any yachtsman worth his salt has read the riddle…..AT LEAST THREEtimesSurprised no one has mentioned 'Riddle of the Sands'. Non boaty, but anything by Michael Connelly. Noir style crime novels much in the style of Raymond Chandler. A recent discovery of mine in the same vein is Ross Macdonald.
A book I loved as a young boy. I recently read it again but in my edition at least (1960, the year Shute died and the book published posthumously) there are a couple of bits that some sensitive readers my find difficult. Aside from the sailing adventure itself if you're at all interested in engineering then there's something in it for you.TRUSTEE FROM THE TOOLROOM is a good read. Nevil Shute's final novel. Lots of sailing and adventure.
I enjoyed Coasting very much. When Jonathan Raban passed away I thought I’d read it again, but it’s still in the queue.Jonathan Raban - Coasting and Passage to Juneau. Not fiction but good reads.
Another vote for the Wreck of the Mary Deare, a griping novel, set initially on a ship, and then on a yacht. Especially recommended as Hammond Innes left his Literary Estate to support Sail Training. It is administered by ASTO, and provides grants to all the different Sail Training organisations in the UK.The wreck of the Mary Deare by Hammond Innes.
Having just finished a book and looking for something completely different, after seeing this suggestion I’m a third of the way thru and it is surprisingly good.Newby's "The Last Grain Race"?
Borrowed from library on your recommendation , really enjoying it! So, thanks.TRUSTEE FROM THE TOOLROOM is a good read. Nevil Shute's final novel. Lots of sailing and adventure.
I have read Moby Dick twice, listened to a good reading of it from Amazon Audible, and enjoyed the film (the one with Gregory Peck as Ahab)Moby Dick is an absolute slog to read the first time, and one of the greatest novels ever written the second (once you know you can get through it and can relax into the prose it's an entirely different book)
Non-fiction, but Madhouse at the End of the Earth is a fantastic, fascinating look at the age of exploration. In a ship, obviously.