From Publishers Weekly:
Moore, an ex-Marine, lawyer and government official, resigned from his Washington, D.C., job in 1981 to sail around the world with his wife in a 41-year-old Concordia yawl. This account of their nearly five years of travel is the print version of a lengthy home movie, complete with details from the ship's logbook, mishaps on the high seas, tales of fellow sailors and difficult crew members and brief glimpses of portside life in places as diverse as Panama, Fiji, New Zealand and South Africa. Moore's prose is breezy and clear, and sailing enthusiasts or those wishing to duplicate such a trip may find the book instructive. Indeed, Moore shares his hard-won knowledge of seamanship and includes a fairly technical appendix on sailing tactics. The general reader, however, must plow through much narrative to reach any nuggets of interest, such as a visit to the French Polynesian island that was the setting of Melville's novel Typee and an observation, based on negotiations with the New Zealand Customs Service, that "Kiwis dislike and therefore instinctively avoid confrontations."
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal:
This is a rather charming (if verbose) ac count of a couple's sail around the world in a 50-foot wooden ketch. Fellow senior citi zens will be impressed by their feats with an elderly boat and its complicated rigging. Their descriptions of the various countries they visit and people they encounter--in cluding fellow sailors and a never-success ful volunteer crew--make for interesting reading. There are the usual storms and other mishaps, not to mention endless de tails involving the various mechanical components of the boat. Recommended for libraries serving armchair sailors.
- Robert E. Greenfield, formerly with Balti more Cty. P.L.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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