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| 1. Atlantic: Great Sea Battles, Heroic Discoveries, Titanic Storms,and a Vast Ocean of a Million Stories by Simon Winchester | |
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Editorial Review Atlantic is a biography of a tremendous space that has been central to the ambitions of explorers, scientists, and warriors, and continues to affect our character, attitudes, and dreams. Poets to potentates, seers to sailors, fishermen to foresters—all have a relationship with this great body of gray and heaving sea. Winchester chronicles that relationship, making the Atlantic come vividly alive. More than a mere history, Atlantic is an unforgettable journey of unprecedented scope by one of the most gifted writers in the English language. Reviews
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) Simon Winchester's Atlantic: Great Sea Battles, Heroic Discoveries, Titanic Storms, and a Vast Ocean of a Million Stories is an arm chair explorers dream and yet another installment in a growing list of terrific books. Filled to brimming with stories of exploration and heroic figures, Winchester sees the Atlantic Ocean as the well spring from which all (or the major part) of European history and greatness finds its roots. Atlantic is as much a biography of the Atlantic Ocean as any other biography and a detailed examination of how some of mankind has interacted with that ocean and been affected by it.
Not wanting to omit anything, Winchester begins the story with an investigation into the formation of the Atlantic basic 370 million years ago and rapidly advances to relatively modern times. Vikings, Norsemen, Portuguese, Dutchmen, the French, English, all have their place in Winchester's book. The title includes the phrase "Million Stories" and surely this is true. As I was reading Atlantic, I was often mindful of the fact that the stories included in the book aren't all of the stories; that there are more forgotten tales than there are remembered tales. That realization is numbing when you think about it. Still, Winchester has managed to pull together a gripping read. If you're a lover of adventure and history you'll want to spend some time with Atlantic. Simon Winchester's previous works include three terrific books among other writings. The Professor and the Madman (1998), The Map that Changed the World (2001), and The Crack at the Edge of the World (2005) are all extremely readable and highly interesting. Atlantic is certainly equally interesting. I highly recommend Atlantic by Simon Winchester. Peace always.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) Atlantic is not easily described. I'm a science & history reader and so I believed I was undertaking another topical read. That was my mistake. Atlantic is a gently rolling hybrid of a travelogue, life journey story, geological epochs, and human history rolled up in a manner to grab the attention of the curious mind seeking the really `big picture' of half a billion years. Hundreds of books have been written to address the particulars of Atlantic's topics. From this legacy of writings and observations, Winchester derives a kind of "organic" Atlantic to describe with mans 'brief' encounter. Winchester pulls the many layers of man's history and experience together in just the right format of snip-it's in context to permit the reader to witness an Ocean that might otherwise be `missed' as a 400 million year old `life form'.
This is not a technical read. It is an enjoyable, personal armchair reflection of man's geo-socio-rhetorical relationship with the Atlantic. It might be best enjoyed on your next transatlantic flight or on beach vacation or, if you're really lucky, a ship crossing looking out over the seas horizon ahead and behind. Sans the pain of an Atlantic flight, it is a poetic writing for all that have stared out across the pond and wondered. You are guaranteed to become the resident savant of Atlantic trivia at your next dinner party. The reader can relate to the author's penchant and his coming to terms with a life lived around the often unnoticed Atlantic's defining nature for Western civilization. The core story is the "Atlantic" ... man is the context around the story. Great book!
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) Simon Winchester's enjoyable sail through thousands of years of Atlantic history could easily double as a useful general primer on western civilization. Covering everything from the Phoenicians, chilean sea bass, Cadiz, and norse dragon ships to deep sea trawlers and the mid ocean mountain range, this book explores related fishy subjects down through the centuries.
"Atlantic" can be nicely entertaining about its subjects, even if it's rather like a wine tasting party in overall coverage of any specific topic, say, on Germany's two fearsome submarine campaigns. In subduing this leviathan of biographies, Mr. Winchester turned to William Shakespeare for inspiration. He reveals his storyline as, "A stage setting that would transmute all the themes of ocean life into players, progressing for infancy to senescence, so that all could be permitted to play their parts in turn." Like weathering patches of rain squalls, Mr. Winchester's story tacks through brief bands of science and lore followed by rather intense short periods of history and geography story telling. Only rarely will the reader find himself fogbound in Mr. Winchester's reminiscenes. Indeed, his personal quest on Namibia's Skeleton Coast in the epilogue, is wonderful reading. This fine book is clearly not intended to be the last word on maritime references. But for any readers wanting a learned, entertaining and lucid introduction to a vast foggy subject, Mr. Winchester's "Atlantic" could certainly be their favorite.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) What an interesting read. We needed a book like this. It talks about the history of the Atlantic Ocean and how she fared with the ships at sea. There were many battles in this ocean (still are) hundreds of ships and boats havetheir last resting place here with Titanic being the most famous one. But it's not just about the ships itself. No, the story is about the Atlantic Ocean and how she has survived through time during storms,battles, destruction, enviroment, weather, you name it and it's here.
The only problem is that when you read the proofs to a book that has yet to be published, things tend to be out of place. Usually, this isn't noticable but here, you have pictures that are blocked with the source of where it comes from, spelling errors and things like that. What I have is basically a reviewers copy. Does it deter from the reading and enjoyment? No because if you are a fan of history, then this book for you will bring you enjoyment. It's also easy on the eyes which will wander to the bottom of the page where the footnotes are. Now, I like the footnotes here instead of the back of the book because this way it doesn't take away from the reading and you can understand things a bit more. Atlantic Ocean is the most popular one if you live in the U.S and Canada so it's something we should know about seeing as how one person goes out there every second on a daily basis. Reading this will give us a better understanding.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) A book like this creates a slice with which to orchestrate an essay.
One of the finest I have ever seen is Europe Between the Oceans by Barry Cunliffe, the story of Europe from 9000 BC through 1000 AD. This history of the Atlantic Ocean is quite good, a way for the author to weave the hydrological with the great explorers, the mapping with the peoples, the battles with the flows of peoples. The result is a window to the human condition as it plays out against the grey waters. I enjoyed the author weaving some of his own visits to places -- Monaco for charts and naming of the seas, for example, and he always seems to be sailing past a headland -- with his eye for events, such as the grand exploratory tour of the HMS Challenger. He uses clear, simple and engaging writing. I am never sure that these sorts of volumes really hang together, in the sense that there is no one story of the Atlantic, rather a series of short essays around the basin, so to speak. But the book is very interesting, the Atlantic from north to south, from cables on the ocean floor to the great ships above. The great scope tells the story of the peoples as they rose against this great ocean, and were consumed within it. ... Read more | |
| 2. Bike Snob: Systematically & Mercilessly Realigning the World of Cycling | |
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list price: $16.95 -- our price: $11.53 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0811869989 Publisher: Chronicle Books Sales Rank: 508 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 3. A Week at the Airport (Vintage International Original) by Alain De Botton | |
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| 4. In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex by Nathaniel Philbrick | |
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list price: $16.00 -- our price: $10.88 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0141001828 Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics) Sales Rank: 3364 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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For anyone desirous of going much deeper into the History of Nantucket, or of Whaling, there are 39 pages of notes written in prose form at the end of the book. They are organized by chapter, and they are further supplemented by a Bibliography. Mr. Philbrick clearly is a man qualified to relate this tale which records one of the more miserable tales of human suffering. It would have been easy and disappointing to let this story turn into a lurid 93 day telling of decisions and actions that no person should ever be forced to make. The Author maintained a scholarly approach, together with objectivity on some points of contention/speculation, of the events and how they may or may not actually have happened. He also offers insight into how these massive creatures communicate, and how that could have played a role in the collission. The Author also relates modern day medical study and facts about what physical and emotional torments the survivors endured. I thought this was a welcome addition to the understanding of just how horrible this experience was. This is the only book I have read on the History of the Essex. The book is readable even if your knowledge of ships, like mine, is near zero. And the story told without embellishment is both terrifying and amazing. A very enjoyable book.
We could have gotten a long saga of castaways dying of thirst and starvation with all of the drama of a potboiler. He could have given us a day by day description of the sea trek, but instead the trek is mercifully taken up in 90 pages. (Don't fret, you will get the anxiety wobblies during this phase of the book.) Philbrick has fully researched the physiology of dying of starvation and thirst and spares us none of the details. To survive, the crew resorted to the drawing of lots, execution and cannibalism. We learn about the history, quite plentiful in fact, of survival cannibalism from the Raft of the Medusa to the Andean plane crash. It is not a book for the squeamish. It is also a book about Nantucket, whaling, men at sea, celestial navigation, maritime commerce, and more. Never are the facts crammed down us like so many notecards in the author's collection, but are deliciously laid out in the context of the story. It is not a long book, but it doesn't seem to short either. Like most good books, it made me want to learn more about the subject, in this case the fascinating history of whaling.
Like Junger, Philbrick recounts a historical, nonfiction tale with the drama and tension exceeding much of today's bestselling fiction. His attention to detail gives a documentary feel and paints a vivid portrait of the struggle of survival. Specifically, I was continually impressed with the way Philbrick wove the specific details of whale hunting and sailing with the driving narrative--a narrative that will keep the pages turning quickly. In addition, Philbrick writes with a keen sense of imagery, pulling the reader into the story by appealing to all senses. As a result, the reader finds him/herself caught up in the drama and excitement of the hunt, filled with dread as the situation looks hopeless, aghast at the suffering, and finally, contemplative of the decisions made. There are no easy answers to the questions raised by this book. Instead, the drama offers a chance to consider and reconsider the drive of survival and the human spirit. Narratives of life and death situations are almost inherently gripping; however, because of Philbrick's skills as a writer, this book does more than entertain--it provokes thought, raising issues that do not end with the final page.
The portraits of the Essex captain and first mate are particularly well drawn and distinctive for an abridged version, as well as the effects of starvation and dehydration. Unlike MOBY DICK, this abridgement gives just enough information on the whaling industry to be interesting, and focuses on the human dimension of the story. The listener has to wonder whether he or she could behave as well as these men did under equally desperate circumstances. Edward Herrmann's reading of the book was excellent with one persistent mispronunciation of the name "Bowditch" being the one jarring note. I guess no one associated with the production had ever been sailing!
This is the story of the whaleship Essex, out of Nantucket on a two year voyage to the Pacific in search of the early nineteenth century's liquid gold, whale oil. The unthinkable happens. A usually docile sperm whale, although large enough to sink a wooden ship, does just that. Rammed twice by an 85 foot leviathan of the sea, the crew takes to three whale boats while its ship is crushed and rendered useless. The resulting ninety day journey is a story of hope, discipline, tragic mistakes, and ever present thirst and starvation which leads the men ever closer to having to execute the "law of the sea" in order to survive. Nathaniel Philbrick weaves first person accounts from survivors, a concise history of Nantucket and the work of catching and rendering whales as well as the physiology of the giant sea mammels and starvation into a first rate book. I read this over three days -- it moves very quickly. The author has a talent for fleshing out his common whalemen so that they are interesting and distinct characters without sacrificing authenticity and fact. If you liked "The Perfect Storm" or Jon Krakauer's "Into Thin Air," you'll find "In the Heart of the Sea" very much in the same vein. A story of people under terrible physical and mental assault which the reader could not imagine enduring, coupled with a superbly explained telling of the issues at hand that is well set in its place and time. Highly recommended -- you may want to finish this one all at once.
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| 5. Pirates of Barbary: Corsairs, Conquests and Captivity in the Seventeenth-Century Mediterranean by Adrian Tinniswood | |
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list price: $26.95 -- our price: $17.79 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 159448774X Publisher: Riverhead Hardcover Sales Rank: 2154 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 6. DC-3: A Legend in Her Time: A 75th Anniversary Photographic Tribute by Bruce McAllister | |
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| 7. In the Cockpit: Inside 50 History-Making Aircraft by Dana Bell | |
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list price: $26.99 -- our price: $17.81 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0061143812 Publisher: Collins Design Sales Rank: 3662 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review The Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum holds the country's premier collection of historic aircrafts, but visitors must view these impressive structures at a distance. IN THE COCKPIT captures the feeling of helming these historic craft with big, gorgeous four–color photographs that will give flight enthusiasts a true pilot's eye view of many of history's most important domestic and military airplanes, jets, and helicopters. Each entry includes archival images of the craft and authoritative text that places each one in the context of the development of aviation technology and world history . Reviews
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| 8. 2011 Wooden Boats Calendar by NOAH Publications | |
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| 9. Jet Age: The Comet, the 707, and the Race to Shrink the World by Sam Howe Verhovek | |
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| 10. The Vincent in the Barn: Great Stories of Motorcycle Archaeology by Tom Cotter | |
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Editorial Review The Vincent in the Barn tells forty such stories--tales of motorcycle hunting dreams come true.From Ducatis in basements to Vincents abandoned in sheds, Harleys in barns to Brit bikes moldering behind urban garages, these are the stories that fuel every motorcyclist's fantasies.The only difference?They're true. | |
| 11. FAR/AIM 2011: Federal Aviation Regulations/Aeronautical Information Manual (FAR/AIM series) by Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) | |
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list price: $16.95 -- our price: $11.53 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 1560277726 Publisher: Aviation Supplies & Academics, Inc. Sales Rank: 6852 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 12. The Complete Book of Corvette: Every Model Since 1953 by Mike Mueller | |
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| 13. Transit Maps of the World by Mark Ovenden | |
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list price: $25.00 -- our price: $16.50 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0143112651 Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics) Sales Rank: 5771 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 14. The Titanic Coloring Book by Peter F. Copeland | |
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| 15. Flight: 100 Years of Aviation by R. G. Grant | |
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| 16. West with the Night by Beryl Markham | |
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The story opens with the author being called in the middle of the night to deliver a tank of oxygen to a dying man. The reason she has been called is because her business is flying a small bi-plane through the wilds of Africa on delivery errands such as these. The flight and subsequent visit with the dying man and his doctor are used to introduce us to Africa - the rich black nights, the stories of her native peoples, the harsh reminder with the appearance of a jackal that "...in Africa there is never any waste." In this first section we also begin to know and wonder about the author, a native of Britain who was transplanted to African soil at the age of 2 and raised by her father on his farm at Njoro. There her primary playmates were the children of the Nandi Murani tribe and her principle schoolroom the African landscape itself. As Markham puts it, "Africa was the breath and life of my childhood. It is still the host of all my darkest fears, the cradle of mysteries always intriguing, but never wholly solved. It is the remembrance of sunlight and green hills, cool water and the yellow warmth of bright mornings. It is as ruthless as any sea, more uncompromising than its own deserts. It is without temperance in its harshness or in its favors. It yields nothing, offering much to men of all races." It is Markham's misfortune, but also her gift, that she could never be fully assimilated by the native people and the landscape. Her father insisted on sending her to school, relatives and friends did their best to expose her to European culture, and in the end Africa itself conspired to force her out of the fold and into the larger world. The end result is a woman who walks a fine and complex line within herself between two radically different perceptions of the world. Although Markham's story is remarkable based on facts alone - taking us from her childhood haunts to her historic flight across the Atlantic Ocean - it is the elegance and depth of the writing that sets this book apart. When she talks about the horses she and her father bred and raised, for example, it's as if she is stepping into the animals' skins. When she discusses her hunt for a fellow pilot, lost in the bush, it is with total absorption in the moment. This is the kind of book that can make you forget you are reading a book, drawing you into the subtleties of life as Markham knew it - engaging all the senses and ultimately your heart as well.
I am not a big fan of the memoir, but Markham's (or whoever wrote it) voice is neither bombastic nor humble; she feels less a narrator or subject than a fellow traveller, along with you for the ride. Although the life she lived was extraordinary and compelling, she refreshingly views it in clipped, casual, careful terms, as unimpressed with herself as if she'd been a midwestern housewife, not a pilot and horse trainer in Colonial Africa. Many readers will approach "West with the Night" out of a pre-existing interest in and knowledge of its era and characters, and will no doubt experience it entirely differently than I did. While a few names rang vague bells, for the most it was an engaging introduction. But I read it as literature, not as history, and enjoyed it immensely as such. I found her small personal anecdotes far more interesting than the accounts of her grand feats. The Atlantic flight that made her famous rounds out the end of the book, but is rather dry and dull compared to her African tales. Stories such as her father's pompous parrot had me in spasms of public giggles. It is little wonder that Hemmingway praised this book, as the sparse directness of its utilitarian prose makes even the Old Man of the Sea seem a flowery romantic. Its structure can be rather meandering, but in that regard it resembles the contours of memory, which makes me believe Markham did indeed write her own book.
"Did you read Beryl Markham's book, "West with the Night"? I knew her fairly well in Africa and never would have suspected that she could and would put pen to paper except to write in her flyer's log book. As it is, she has written so well, and marvelously well, that I was completely ashamed of myself as a writer. .... But this girl who is, to my knowledge, very unpleasant,... can write rings around all of us who consider ourselves as writers. The only parts of it that I know about personally, on account of having been there at the time and heard the other people's stories, are absolutely true. So, you have to take as truth the early stuff about when she was a child which is absolutely superb. She omits some very fantastic stuff which I know about which would destroy much of the character of the heroine; but what is that anyhow in writing?" As Hemingway may have suspected, Markham may not be the real author, and "West With the Night" does leave out major portions of her life; it would be a good idea to read it along with the biography of her life, "Straight On Till Morning: The Biography of Beryl Markham" by Mary Lovell (Lovell also wrote "A Rage to Live: A Biography of Richard and Isabel Burton").
Beryl Markham neglects many aspects of her colorful life, the story briefly covers her child hood in Africa and then mostly focuses on her wonderful flight, actually harder than Lindbergh's flight since she flew East to West, Europe to North America, against the jet stream. The description of the flight is thrilling up til the last when she crash lands--in North America. If you want to know more about Beryl and her escapades, read "Out of Isak Dinesen, Karn Blixon's Untold Story" by Linda Donelson. Beryl knew Blixon (17 years her senior, and a mentor at some points) and Denis Finch Hatton. Also, the wonderful BBC film "Heat of the Sun" contains a character played by Susannah Harker (an avatrix) loosely based on Beryl Markham.
Ms. Markham's inimitable flair for description and metaphor are enchantingly powerful. One could truly open the book to any random page and find a treasure. No previous knowledge of plot or precedence would be vital to the enjoyment. That such extraordinary prose also reveals an incredible life provides a rich dividend. Savor the following corsage randomly plucked from the bouquet: "Arab Ruta... is of the tribe that observes with equal respect the soft voice and the hardened hand, the fullness of a flower, the quick finality of death. His is the laughter of a free man happy at his work, a strong man with lust for living. He is not black. His skin holds the sheen and warmth of used copper. His eyes are dark and wide-spaced, his nose is full-boned and capable of arrogance. "He is arrogant now, swinging the propeller, laying his lean hands on the curved wood, feeling an exultant kinship in the coiled resistance to his thrust. "He swings hard. A splutter, a strangled cough from the engine like the premature stirring of a sleep-slugged labourer. In the cockpit I push gently on the throttle, easing it forward, rousing the motor, feeding it, soothing it." My first encounter with this charming book was accidental but fortuitous. I found the paperback in an airport bookstore, and stayed engrossed and enchanted by the lyrical meanderings for the entirety of my three-hour flight. A few years later I discovered the audio version which springs to an even greater life in the voice of Julie Harris. Her reading of the horse race that proved to be a watershed moment for Ms. Markham, still has the capacity to choke me to tears, though I have listened to it many times. A few reviewers here have given less than laudatory reviews. This book is absolutely among the top five I have ever read, and I must pity those unfortunate souls who are tone-deaf to the rhapsodic music playing among its pages. Never mind my glowing endorsement. Never mind that Ernest Hemmingway said that Beryl Markham "has written so well, and marvelously well, that I was completely ashamed of myself as a writer." Just find this book and open it randomly to any page. You will quickly discover that this book is an extraordinary encounter. Don't miss it!
Stunningly evocative of life in East Africa in the early part of the 20th Century, West With the Night carries the reader directly into Markham's life. If there was a person lucky enough to have truly lived more than Markham lived, we might in fact have to turn to Hemingway to find him. Having broken all stereotypes before they were known as stereotypes, Markham did 80 years ago what few women today would even imagine. Raised by her widower father, Markham was the only white child within 200 miles in any direction. Under the tutelage of native hunters, she learned to face down lions and elephants, and went on to become a professional horse trainer. But flying was her true calling. Learning the geography of the cockpit from no less an instructor than Tom Black, one of England's best-known bush pilots and an aviator who is still revered, Markham soon became the only woman pilot in East Africa, delivering everything from the mundane (gin for the white hunters) to the life-saving (tanks of oxygen for malaria victims). Throughout the book, we are treated to some of the most vivid descriptions of an Africa that is long gone. Curiously missing, however, is any sense of her love interests as she grew and matured. We come close when we learn of her affection for Tom Black, but the affection feels brotherly in nature. And, then again, when she partakes of a transcontinental adventure with the dashing Baron von Blixen---one of the legendary characters of colonial Africa--we're never certain if passion played a part. Perhaps the absence of a love interest is a reflection of the more genteel times in which the book was written, or perhaps her true love was Africa and the sense of being truly alive that such a place seems to have imparted to every day of Beryl Markham's life. But in fact, Markham is still alive--in a way. You cannot help but sense her presence after the first chapter. West With the Night is that good.
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| 17. How Cars Work by Tom Newton | |
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list price: $24.95 -- our price: $16.47 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0966862309 Publisher: Black Apple Press Sales Rank: 8812 US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 18. Flight to Heaven: A Plane Crash...A Lone Survivor...A Journey to Heaven--and Back by Capt. Dale Black, Ken Gire | |
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list price: $14.99 -- our price: $10.19 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0764207946 Publisher: Bethany House Sales Rank: 9301 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review Capt. Dale Black has flown as a commercial pilot all over the world, but one flight changed his life forever--an amazing journey to heaven and back. The only survivor of a horrific plane crash, Dale was hovering between life and death when he had a wondrous experience of heaven. What he saw, what he heard, and what he learned there continues to ripple through his life and touch others. Against all odds, Dale miraculously recovered from his injuries and learned to fly again. Now, with his life as a testament, he shares his inspiring story--offering hope and encouragement for those dealing with serious injuries or the loss of a loved one, and those looking for assurance about this life and the next. Reviews
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| 19. Over the Edge of the World: Magellan's Terrifying Circumnavigation of the Globe (P.S.) by Laurence Bergreen | |
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list price: $15.99 -- our price: $10.87 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 006093638X Publisher: Harper Perennial Sales Rank: 5338 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review Ferdinand Magellan's daring circumnavigation of the globe in the sixteenth century was a three-year odyssey filled with sex, violence, and amazing adventure. Now in Over the Edge of the World, prize-winning biographer and journalist Laurence Bergreen entwines a variety of candid, firsthand accounts, bringing to life this groundbreaking and majestic tale of discovery that changed both the way explorers would henceforth navigate the oceans and history itself. Reviews
For most of us, the facts about Magellan have been boiled down to Spanish galleons, funny helmets, and the first circumnavigation of the globe. Bergreen recovers the context to tell a story of a religious man, driven by vision, ambition, and personal slight. Along the way he explains the strategic urgency of Magellan's quest and details the logistics of undertaking the voyage. He helps us understand why cloves, cinnamon, and nutmeg were matters of national security to sixteenth century Europeans. Bergreen leaves us with no doubt that Magellan was courageous. His Magellan is not evil, though the evils of the Age of Exploration are already evident in him and his men. As in other tellings, Magellan's death on the beach at Cebu is an obvious metaphor for the collision of East and West, but Bergreen leaves it to others to belabor the notion. He's much more interested in describing the local politics that set the scene for the tragedy. With such rich detail and engaging writing, the story of Magellan comes to life as a vivid adventure and an enlightening history.
I was frequently distracted by the lack of good maps to supplement Bergreen's prose accounts of the Armada's route. Most saliently, the author or his editors have chosen to not include a map of the Strait of Maglellan itself. Instead there are some admittedly fascinating depictions of portions of the Strait and a NASA photograph from space that I found utterly indecipherable. While Bergreen's long asides on peripheral topics often hit the mark -- such as his discussion of scurvy and its eventual decoding -- others, including some crucial to his account, fall substantially short. Despite the issue's importance, none of Bergreen's numerous attempts to explain the Pope's demarcation of Spanish and Portugese spheres of control (the Treaty of Tordesiillas) adequately clarify how it applied to the Spice Islands on the other side of the world and already explored by Portugal. Of course, this could possibly be the result of my own denseness; others may find his explication perfectly comprehensible. I did not. Also in this category of incomplete clarification is the author's mention of the International Date Line and the fact of its non-existence in Magellan's day. He references this drawback twice and both times he is satisfied with saying that the Dateline now extends westward from Guam. Of all the facets he could emphasize, this seems an odd choice given that the Dateline does (and must) run for the most part North-South. The location of the Date Line is in fact a highly complex subject (see http://www.phys.uu.nl/~vgent/idl/idl.htm), yet no map that I'm aware of shows it running near Guam. Yes, as a U.S. possession, Guam maintains an idiosyncratic relationship to GMT. And, yes, Guam was Magellan's first landing after crossing the Pacific. But Bergreen should have provided greater context for his remark. These and other examples of what I deem to be distracting lapses often brought me up short. But the book is obviously the product of prodigious research (in, for the most part, attractive places to do such research), and the faults I cite may not seem so for many readers. The power of the story and Bergreen's skill in telling it will carry most readers through to the end, just as it did for this reader. But ... it definitely needs more maps.
This is a great account of one of the legendary journeys of history. Supplemented by maps, inserts, and first hand accounts, readers join on the harrowing trek that proved once and for all that the world is round. No one will feel over the edge with this great look at the "Terrifying Circumnavigation of the Globe" by Magellan and his crew. Harriet Klausner
Particularly absorbing are the book's insights into the strengths and flaws of the players involved. Magellan was clearly a masterful navigator, a man with a vision and the single-minded ambition to pursue it. When the Portuguese refused to back his venture and made a point of disdaining him, Magellan turned to their rivals, the Spanish, who agreed to support him -- but also somewhat unsubtly undermined his authority on the voyage. (The mystery of Portugal's refusal is made clear late in the book; it is an incredible piece of irony that resonates with current events.) As the voyage proceeds, facing hostile natural conditions, resentment among a crew with divided loyalties, and the unknown, Magellan emerges as a complex personality, a man with a sure hand in some matters but blind spots that prove increasingly costly. The objective of the mission was ostensibly to bring home (to Spain) spices and, more specifically, cloves. Men died, nations clashed, ships were lost, and mankind's knowledge of the world was expanded to this end. And, ultimately, when the survivors of Magellan's fleet returned to port, their reception was a mix of skepticism, hostility, and amazement, filtered through a political lens of faltering monarchies and changing times. This is a well-told story that is fraught with current relevance.
Reading this book, I found myself transported into 16th century Europe, an era full of intrigue, magic and of casual disregard for human life. The book was absolutely captivating and I was not able to put it down. From my perspective, the most interesting thing about the story is that while today Magellan is recognized as a hero and as one of the most important explorers of all time, in his day Magellan received no recognition and was the target of suspicion and hatred. For the most part, Bergreen's writing style is fluid and easy to read, however at times it is a bit too flowery for my taste. The book also suffers from a shortage of illustrations and maps which could have been instructive. For example, an illustration of Magellan's ships, the weapons and armor of the era and current pictures of some of the main locations involved, would all have been nice. Nevertheless, I highly recommend this book for any fan of popular history books.
At the same time, Bergreen totally immerses the reader into every detail of life at sea in the 16th Century. I doubt anyone alive today could stand what those sailors had to survive, trapped aboard those leaking, rotting wooden ship, without proper food, healthcare, or even fresh water. Anyone taking a Caribbean Cruise should read this book first to fully appreciate that life at sea is not one All-You-Can-Eat Buffet and shuffleboard. Make sure your kids eat their fruits and vegetables, as scurvy is not a problem you want to have in your family!!! I totally recommend this book. It's a quick, enjoyable read that puts the reader right onto the deck of a 16th Century caravel for one of the most courageous and daring voyages ever undertaken by man. ... Read more | |
| 20. Seized: A Sea Captain's Adventures Battling Scoundrels and Pirates While Recovering Stolen Ships in the World's Most Troubled Waters by Max Hardberger | |
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list price: $25.00 -- our price: $16.50 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0767931386 Publisher: Broadway Sales Rank: 9818 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review
Reviews
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) Captain Hardberger is a very unique and driven man! He is licensed to serve as Captain on any oceangoing merchant ship, he's a flying instructor, and has passed the Bar Exam in California, certainly a unique set of credentials. Based on this book, he applies the energy and dedication it would take to acquire such a varied skill set to every task he undertakes as a professional. The book reads as a series of stories about different situations, mostly involving something to do with a ship being held in port illegitimately or through corruption (one story involves slipping several dozen cropdusting planes out of East Germany in the chaotic days just before German reunification). He gives us a lot of insight into the details of how merchant ships do business in a wide variety of ports, and the problems this creates both for the ships and for the merchants and service providers who tend to their needs. These are very readable, and really do seem like something from Mission Impossible in some cases.
Less obvious is the darker side of his life--The relationships in his life suffer because he is continually traveling overseas, and is frequently in imminent peril of being imprisoned. And often he has difficulty getting paid or the men his clients hire to help him don't get paid, or get paid a pittance after risking death or imprisonment to get someone else's big-money asset out. A significant number of the ships he rescues are lost at sea or otherwise go out of service only a couple of years after his involvement with them. It wasn't "Gripping" in the sense that I was lost in his world hanging on every word, but it is well-written and I kept reading. I finished the book in one evening with a couple of short breaks. Usually he explains technical or professional matters adequately, but in a handful of cases he referred to things where I didn't know what he was talking about (and as a naval history buff I'm more attuned to nautical matters than most landlubbers). Strongly recommended as an entertaining read, but it won't rock your world.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) Captain Hardberger's book introduced me to a world that I knew nothing about. I am not a seaman and certainly have no experience with repossessing ships. As a result, I found the book to be extremely interesting. The writing is simple, straightforward, and basically just tells the story. It is as if you are just listening to his yarns.
The author has experience as a ship captain, airplane pilot, lawyer, teacher, adventurer, and raconteur. His experiences in this book deal with recovering stolen freighters for a living - Central and South America, Greece, Russia, The Netherlands. The man gets around. Usually his repossessions involve outsmarting the other guy or finding a way to remove the vessel in the middle of the night without drawing the attention of the authorities. The situations are almost always nip and tuck, and certainly call for an ability to think on your feet. I found the book to be highly entertaining and would recommend it to anyone interested in ships or looking for some adventure stories.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) The author Max Hardberger carries credentials of airplane pilot and licensed instructor, oil rig worker, a high school teacher, attorney, and....licensed Captain of any merchant ship in any sea. I also might add: repo man, adventurer, and now....an author. I personally might add another skill...operations officer and tactician.
In this 286-page autobiography, Hardberger relates a dozen recoveries of illegally seized ships in some of the most dangerous ports in the world. He seemed remarkably skilled at creating sound operational plans and diversionary schemes to steal back illegally seized ships. Hardberger also spoke a some length about how merchant marine shipping is done, and the laws and rules that deal with it. As an example, He took the reader through an entire process of a name change for a vessel which was a big part of one of the repos. In one short paragraph, he made a point by alluding to an adventure where he crash-landed a plane who's engine was on fire. He didn't even bother telling about THAT incident. Somehow or other, I think he has a few more adventures that didn't even make the cut. An engaging first effort, and smoothly done. I rate this 4.8 stars, and worth your read time.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) I wish this pre-publication copy had a portrait of Max Hardberger, but perhaps it's wise not to help out any of the many low-lifes he has upset in his extraordinary career. How many guys hold many of the various licenses that entitle you to command a ship, have been a cropduster pilot, and flying instructor, and passed the California Bar exam at the first try based entirely on self-study? Quite a character, and the book reflects that.
It's a mostly autobiographical account of a life containing as much varied action as about any ten others. He was a sort of "repo man" but with a difference - he wasn't repossessing cars or trucks, but merchant ships that various crooked or corrupt entities had managed to get their hands on and tie up with legalities in a third-world port. To help him, he has an extraordinary network of world-wide contacts who can provide at short notice anything from a complete ships' crew, to an engine-room part, to a fast boat to meet him at sea, to fifty shipping containers big enough to hold small planes being smuggled out of East Germany...just one extraordinary story after another. He is not short of determination, initiative, and personal force. It's a world most of us have never seen...everything is done with bundles of cash, tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars transferred by Western Union. Lots of practical hints: if you ever have to rename a ship that carries the name "Faroah VII" in foot-high steel letters, you tell the workman, "Okay, the new build name is "Lapo VI. " You cut off the last A and H and the second I in the Roman numeral. You make the F an L and the R a P. Easy as pie." And there are some fascinating human stories - his friend Charlie gets his Colombian girlfriend pregnant. He tells his wife that "abortion was out of the question, and that he would have to divorce her so he could marry Adelia and bring her and his son to the United States." His wife agrees(!) and the new family come to the US, but the immigration authorities are watching him because they suspect it was a sham marriage, so he "got into the routine of leaving his new wife's house every morning to go down to have coffee with his ex-wife and plan the day's work." Max comments that "Charlie was the kind of guy who made the world do things his way". No kidding. Great read - I gulped it in two sessions. Enjoy.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) I'm not much of a reader, but will do it on occasion to relax and pass the time. However with my Attention Deficit Disorder, I have countless books that I've started, and made it 3/4 of the way through and left them sit to not finish. I started this book and finished it in a matter of days, and it is a couple hundred page read.
As someone else commented, the story reads just like your sitting next to someone in the bar. The story is very relatable and expresses compassion. It is the good guy side of piracy in a sense. The book would make a great gift for anyone interested in the maritimes. Anybody that loves the sea has an inherent love of reading sea stories.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) Captain Max Hardberger is a man's man, and this book tells you how cool he is and how it makes my ordinary desk job seem awful in comparison to the life and adventure he has.
Reclaiming freighters that have been stolen isn't the easiest task there is, and Captain Max is part spy, part thief in order to get his job done. The stories themselves are something that's made for a suspenseful movie, and it's amazing that he hasn't ended up shot or worse in all of these. And reading his exploits all over the world, it's like you're there with him with the vivid descriptions of non-glamorous places and you will have your heart pumping. The book itself is a good quick read. Sure, it doesn't flow well but it's not a novel, but a retelling of events. And as a story teller, Captain Max is amazing.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) I know little about the sea and have never sailed anything larger than a Sunfish. But I grew up in a port and am not happy far from one, and I loved Hammond Innes adventure boods (such as Atlantic Fury) when I was a boy. I don't know if Max Hardberger did the same, but you get the flavor from passages like:
"Ramesh had cut the tail line and was standing over the stern breast line as I ran up." 'Wait,' I hissed, 'Wait!' 'Let's wait 'til de bow is out,' he whispered. 'Dat way de ship will drif' straight.' I nodded and clapped him on the shoulder. The stern closed with the dock as the bow swung out, the stern breast line acting as a fulcrum. Then the stern went aground, and as the bow tried to keep swinging, the stern breast line groaned and trembled under the strain. I fumbled with my machete, trying to get it out. Before I could do it, though, the hawser snapped. The ragged end shot back through the Panama chock, knocked over a ventilator trunk, and slammed into an empty fifty-five gallon drum, bending it double." The mix of nautical jargon, precisely described physical actions and enthusiastic adventures with buddies is still irresistible to me. In this case the stories are true, which makes things more interesting, although not as neatly dramatic as adventure fiction. Who wouldn't want to be the guy who has a reliable pal in every port, who can captain a ship and fly a plane, and who can plot a course anywhere in the world to a port where your enemies can't get you, mend a hull, bribe a customs inspector or con a judge; all for a little money and the satisfaction of not letting the crooks and sleazeballs run your corner of the world. I admit the claimed ratio of risk to cash reward strains credulity, so I suspect the former was smaller or the latter was bigger than the book implies. I believe that an outraged sense of justice was a major motivation but it may have been exaggerated. All of this would have made this a four-star book, and a guilty pleasure at that. But as you read, you discover there is far more than a boys' adventure story here. This is a serious autobiography of a fascinating guy. True, stealing ships isn't curing cancer or fighting for world peace, but it is a bold and individual assertion of individuality. His story, and there is much more to his life than the repossessions or even than the sea, is an inspiration for anyone who ever despaired at the list of careers their high school guidance counselor had on offer. You can make your own life, on your own terms, without anyone's permission. It may not end well, but your high school guidance counselor can't promise you a happy ending either. And who can say what the effect of your ripples will be? ... Read more | |
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