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Wanderer

Lyons Press Maritime Classics
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Since its publication in 1963, Sterling Haydens autobiography, Wanderer, has been surrounded by controversy. The author was at the peak of his earning power as a movie star when he suddenly quit. He walked out on Hollywood, walked out of a shattered marriage, defied the courts, broke as an outlaw, set sail with his four children in the schooner Wanderer--bound for the South Seas. His attempt to escape launched his autobiography. It is the candid, sometimes painfully revealing confession of a man who scrutinized his every self-defeat and self-betrayal in the unblinking light of conscience.

Introduction to the 1977 Edition
Book I: Man at Bay
Book II: Outward Bound
Book III: Exile from Oblivion
Book IV: Ironed Wanderer
Book V: Abysmal Voyage
Book VI: Cold Star Blazing

 

...one unforgettable voyage...under a captain whose words may echo in your mind and whose attitude may inform your spirit for the rest of your life.
— The Times (UK)

An impressive writer. Like Fitzgerald, Hayden is a romantic. His writing about the sea evokes echoes of Conrad and McFee, of London and Galsworthy...Beautifully done.
— Los Angeles Times

A superb piece of writing...Echoes from Poe and Melville to Steinbeck and Mailer. A work of fascination on every level.
— New York Post

Haydens wonderful autobiography Wanderer ...should be in every main salon aboard every boat. Haydens life cant be emulated, but it is instructive
— Ocean Navigator
 

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