Long Way

GLOBE PEQUOTISBN: 9781493042784

Sheridan House Maritime Classic

Price:
Sale price$34.99
Stock:
In stock, 68 units

By Bernard Moitessier, Translated by William Rodarmor
Imprint: LYONS PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
100 x 100 mm
Weight:
300 g
Pages:
256

Description

Bernard Moitessier was born in 1925 in Indochina and much of his sailing knowledge was gained during time spent at sea with the fishermen of the Gulf of Siam. One of the greatest ocean voyagers, he became a legend in his time. He was also a gifted writer and wrote four books describing his seagoing adventures. He moved to France where he spent the last years of his life working on his memoirs, Tamata and the Alliance (Sheridan House, 1995), the story of an unusual man and an exciting life. Bernard Moitessier died in the summer of 1994.


Part One

Chapter 1: Full Sail

Chapter 2: Clear Light

Chapter 3: Sunday at Trinidad

Chapter 4: Muchos Pocos Hacen Un Muncho

Chapter 5: Played and Lost…Played and Won



Part Two

Chapter 6: Good Hope

Chapter 7: A Saw-tooth Wake

Chapter 8: The Days and the Nights

Chapter 9: The Long Way

Chapter 10: The Rule of the Game

Chapter 11: Christmas and the Rat

Chapter 12: The Time of the Very Beginnings



Part Three

Chapter 13: My Elder Brother

Chapter 14: Joshua against Joshua

Chapter 15: One Night…

Chapter 16: One Day…and a Night



Part Four

Chapter 17: True Dreams—and False

Chapter 18: Time to Choose

Chapter 19: The Turning Point

Chapter 20: Listen, Joshua…

Chapter 21: Time to Choose—Part II

Chapter 22: The Second Turning Point

Appendix

Glossary


Moitessier is better known as one of the greatest ocean voyagers and was a legend in his time. Last month we reviewed the last book he wrote Tamata and the Alliance. This book is about his Round the World Race for singlehanded yachts. For Moitessier, the race finished in mid-Pacific after he had passed the three Capes and crossed his outward track, leading, and with the hardest sections behind him, he decided to forfeit the race and continue into the Pacific again, to anchor finally among friends in Tahiti. His actions were never explained by the news media; they could not have been, for the voyage had always been seen by Moitessier as something other than a sponsored, publicized, competitive event. It was on the ocean, alone with his boat, that Moitessier began to regard this as a voyage that could not end for him with the reward of those whose values were not his.

— Sailing Inland & Offshore





One of the worlds most famous ocean sailors, Moitessier had sailed for more than a year from Plymouth, England to the Indian Ocean when he inexplicably abandoned the lead in the 1968-1969 Round-the-World single-handed race. He sailed to Tahiti, dropped anchor and dropped out. Until the publication of this book, only Moitessier and a few friends knew why. Most of the book is a diary of that voyage with philosophical side trips into modern civilization. There is also a 60-page appendix that can stand alone as a small reference volume of details such as route planning, sail repair, the problems of sail and line chafe, rigging and hull construction, self-steering, freak waves and weather, plus much more. Altogether a strange, fascinating, and informative book.

— Boat U.S.


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