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Doreen Armitage, author of the bestselling From the Wheelhouse: Tugboaters Tell their own Stories, is back with a fresh collection of salty tales from a varied collection of men who earn their living in, on or beside the sea. A former DFO skipper tells a heartrending story of trying to rescue the crew of a fish boat foundering off the west coast of Vancouver Island in wind so strong it cartwheeled their life raft "across the waves like a tumbleweed." A coastal pilot recounts the horrors of trying to scramble up the sides of towering ships in tossing seas, and a near-death experience after falling into the frigid ocean. A tugboat skipper tells of towing a mountainous bundle of logs--called a Davis raft--from the Queen Charlotte Islands only to have it hit rocks and break apart, scattering enough timber to build a small city. A commercial dive fisherman remembers the time his buddy befriended a big harmless-seeming octopus, who responded by trying to tear his helmet off.
Some of these stories involve momentous events with sinking ships and loss of life, but most simply recount everyday happenings, from the humorous to the strange. Together, they offer a captivating picture of life along BC's working waterfront in all its variety.
"Armitage's strength as an interviewer is that she quite clearly befriends her subjects, puts them at ease, and gets them talking. Her strength as a writer is that she takes the resulting material and steps out of the way - her subject's voices are always in the forefront, with her own voice only taking over, quietly, to move the narrative from one topic to the next. The resulting text engages the reader with the same intimacy and immediacy as if one were sitting in a warm galley, chewing the fat with a mix of good friends and new acquaintances while the weather beats agains the windows."
—Simon Hill, Mariner Life
"The old cliché that fact is stranger than fiction rings true as these mariners retell accounts from a world far removed from the run-of-the-mill, land-bound occupations so many of us experience...
"Armitage still has her knack of letting these interviewees speak for themselves to portray a nautical realm that is by turn amusing, terrifying, fascinating and real."
—Martyn J. Clark, Victoria Times-Colonist
–Praise for Tales From the Galley
Harbour Publishing
ISBN: 9781550174380
Hardback
8.5 in x 11.0 in - 198 pp
Publication Date: 10/10/2007
BISAC Subject(s): TRA006000-TRANSPORTATION / Ships & Shipbuilding / General, BIO026000-BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Personal Memoirs, TRA000000-TRANSPORTATION / General
Description
Doreen Armitage, author of the bestselling From the Wheelhouse: Tugboaters Tell their own Stories, is back with a fresh collection of salty tales from a varied collection of men who earn their living in, on or beside the sea. A former DFO skipper tells a heartrending story of trying to rescue the crew of a fish boat foundering off the west coast of Vancouver Island in wind so strong it cartwheeled their life raft "across the waves like a tumbleweed." A coastal pilot recounts the horrors of trying to scramble up the sides of towering ships in tossing seas, and a near-death experience after falling into the frigid ocean. A tugboat skipper tells of towing a mountainous bundle of logs--called a Davis raft--from the Queen Charlotte Islands only to have it hit rocks and break apart, scattering enough timber to build a small city. A commercial dive fisherman remembers the time his buddy befriended a big harmless-seeming octopus, who responded by trying to tear his helmet off.
Some of these stories involve momentous events with sinking ships and loss of life, but most simply recount everyday happenings, from the humorous to the strange. Together, they offer a captivating picture of life along BC's working waterfront in all its variety.
"Armitage's strength as an interviewer is that she quite clearly befriends her subjects, puts them at ease, and gets them talking. Her strength as a writer is that she takes the resulting material and steps out of the way - her subject's voices are always in the forefront, with her own voice only taking over, quietly, to move the narrative from one topic to the next. The resulting text engages the reader with the same intimacy and immediacy as if one were sitting in a warm galley, chewing the fat with a mix of good friends and new acquaintances while the weather beats agains the windows."
—Simon Hill, Mariner Life
"The old cliché that fact is stranger than fiction rings true as these mariners retell accounts from a world far removed from the run-of-the-mill, land-bound occupations so many of us experience...
"Armitage still has her knack of letting these interviewees speak for themselves to portray a nautical realm that is by turn amusing, terrifying, fascinating and real."
—Martyn J. Clark, Victoria Times-Colonist
–Praise for Tales From the Galley
Details
Harbour Publishing
ISBN: 9781550174380
Hardback
8.5 in x 11.0 in - 198 pp
Publication Date: 10/10/2007
BISAC Subject(s): TRA006000-TRANSPORTATION / Ships & Shipbuilding / General, BIO026000-BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Personal Memoirs, TRA000000-TRANSPORTATION / General