Val Howells - 'Up my Particular Creek'

webcraft

Well-known member
Joined
8 Jul 2001
Messages
40,182
Location
Cyberspace
www.bluemoment.com
.
Val Howells is a towering figure in yachting history, the last survivor of the first ever singlehanded transatlantic race.

'Up My Particular Creek' is a new, revised edition of 'Up That Particular Creek'. The new edition has been extensively revised by the author, set in a new typeface and published in various formats.

Yachting books fall into various categories. There is the embellished and neatly decorated log, a simple and honest travelogue of passages made and places visited. There is the technical account, embellished with nautical know-how, charts and diagrams at every turn. There is the semi-mystical account a la Moitessier which seeks to capture the transcendental essence of the bluewater experience.

Finally, there is the rumbustious yarning factional style of an author like Tristan Jones. Then there is this book. At first glance it falls firmly into the Tristan Jones camp - but the book merits more than that first glance, and the reader is soon drawn into a yachting narrative like no other this reviewer has ever read.

Realisation gradually dawns as we read the first chapter that the voyage is already well under way, with Lanzarote somewhere on the starboard bow. The author muses and meanders, and although we do eventually find out where this boat is headed we are never sure where the whimsy of the skipper may take us.

To educate while entertaining he includes copious (and interesting) footnotes at the end of every chapter. Once ashore forget provisioning, vaselining eggs or haggling for fruit . . . it's off to a bar, a poker school with some dubious waterfront characters, and an all night session ending in the world's funniest dinghy disaster . . . there aren't many yachting books I've laughed out loud at.

A second stop in the Canaries to drop off one of the poker school proves interesting . . . the author's insight into character and his descriptive powers produce scenes with a depth rarely found in travel writing, all enhanced meantime by the typically Anglo/Welsh, almost poetical use of language.

The structure of the prose, like the structure of the book, is a constant source of surprise, a literary journey matching the nautical one. And so off to that particular creek. Exactly what happens, why the Atlantic crossing is somewhat unusual and how he manages to get graphic sex into the narrative I shall leave you to discover for yourselves.

Up my Particular Creek - Val Howells - KINDLE edition

The book is also available in hardback and paperback from the author's own website.

- W
 

chinita

Well-known member
Joined
11 Dec 2005
Messages
13,224
Location
Outer Hebrides
Visit site
Although I have the original, I have just ordered 'Sailing into Solitude'.

Asked for it to be inscribed 'For V119, Chinita. Sistership to Cardinal Vertue'

Hope he doesn't mind!
 

chinita

Well-known member
Joined
11 Dec 2005
Messages
13,224
Location
Outer Hebrides
Visit site
Just received it. What a fascinating diversion and format from the original.

I implore anybody with even a smidgeon of interest in our maritime heritage to buy this book.

I am going to read it and then encase it in clingfilm for my eight year old son's future inspiration.
 
Last edited:

webcraft

Well-known member
Joined
8 Jul 2001
Messages
40,182
Location
Cyberspace
www.bluemoment.com
Just received it. What a fascinating diversion and format from the original.

I implore anybody with even a smidgeon of interest in our maritime heritage to buy this book.

I am going to read it and then encase it in clingfilm for my eight year old son's future inspiration.

What did you think of the website? Was the purchasing process straightforward?

- W
 

chinita

Well-known member
Joined
11 Dec 2005
Messages
13,224
Location
Outer Hebrides
Visit site
What did you think of the website? Was the purchasing process straightforward?

- W

Very good and very straightforward except that there was apparently no way to ask for an inscription/dedication during the ordering process. I sent an e-mail with a request; it was answered within a few hours.

I was so pleased with the service and, after speed reading a few chapters, I e-mailed a short message expressing my satisfaction.

The next day I got a reply from Val. He explained that it was, in fact, his own publishing company and would I permit him to pass on my comments for publication on his website and with Amazon.

I replied in the affirmative!
 

webcraft

Well-known member
Joined
8 Jul 2001
Messages
40,182
Location
Cyberspace
www.bluemoment.com
.
Thanks for the feedback. There is an option to ask for an inscription when paying by PayPal, but it isn't totally obvious.

The book is a fascinating bit of yachting history IMO. Val is quite a character too, still running his own publishing company at his age. Look out for an article by Dick Durham in the January (pre-Christmas) PBO.

- W
 

bitbaltic

Well-known member
Joined
21 Nov 2011
Messages
2,681
Location
Boat in Milford Haven
sailingkarisma.wordpress.com
I ordered my copy of sailing into solitude two or three weeks ago, turned up a day or two later. I had read Chichester's account of the OSTAR but was only switched on to the other books after reading Paul Hiney's account of the 2005 race. I agree that the option on PayPal to request an inscription isn't well flagged in the PayPal system- took me a while to find it. A one-liner on the landsker website about where to find it might help. Anyway I didn't want anything specific so asked for the author's own choice of words, and the book turned up with a lovely inscription wishing me fair winds and beam reaching :) definitely appreciated by a Bristol channel sailor who usually has a Hoolie on the nose!

It's a privilege to own the book and I hope Val is around for many years yet to keep providing inspiration to the rest of us!
 
Top