New book by William Least Heat Moon

thataway

Active member
Today's Wall Street Journal had a book review on "Roads to Quoz" by William Least Heat Moon (William Trogdon--English, Irish, Osage Native American Descent). River Horse (when he took a C Dory 22 coast to Coast with minimal portaging) endeared him to the C Brats, and Blue Highways was a rambling about some of America's byways.

This new book covers travels in 4 sections: North East, North West, South East and South West, but starts in Arkansas and follows the Ouachita River, Over 3 years the narritative follows 16,000 miles of byways, and only ventures into one city: Baltimore MD. As usual there are colorful narritatives and interesting people.

It sounds like a good read. I'll order it, and then pass it along to other members.

If you own a C Dory and have not read "River Horse", it is a must. My Copy went with my C Dory 22 to Jeff.
 
I guess you either love or hate River Horse. Being about a voyage in a C-Dory did not make it a good book by me. I found the writing extremely tedious. I don't know if anybody else felt the same way - when I have to go to the dictionary ten times in the first five pages, I figure the author is just carried away with himself. I call the writing style "flatulent." Couldn't finish it.



thataway":2kphazsn said:
If you own a C Dory and have not read "River Horse", it is a must. My Copy went with my C Dory 22 to Jeff.
 
Jeez Pat, the fumes will linger. I at least finished "River Horse" and can tell you for me if didn't improve from whatever point you couldn't continue. Know there's many others who really enjoyed it, so think we might be in the minority. This is one of the very few recommendations by Bob, that I will let pass by.

Jay
 
I calls 'em like I sees 'em! More power to those folks who enjoyed the book!


Hunkydory":2irf57re said:
Jeez Pat, the fumes will linger. I at least finished "River Horse" and can tell you for me if didn't improve from whatever point you couldn't continue. Know there's many others who really enjoyed it, so think we might be in the minority. This is one of the very few recommendations by Bob, that I will let pass by.

Jay
 
Hmmm, I enjoyed both River Horse, mostly because of the C Dory thread. But then when I picked up Blue Highways, I enjoyed it for the descriptions and out of the way places. Certainly River Horse did give C Dory a good plug, even though at times his "seamanship" might be a bit suspect....I wouldn't be surprised if some of the owners were introduced to the C Dory through this book. It is certainly a cheap read--since there are over 250 copies used on the internet for one cents, plus $3.99 shipping and handling.

One reviewer says: "I got in here because i just finished River Horse, which i bought at Powells while on a visit. It just shone out on a shelf and said, "Read Me." One of the most verbiant, richly delivered and honest books i hve ever read. He uses words i did not know. We are colleagues from Mizzou, one of the finest educational institutions in the world, and he is bringing me back to the craft and the passion that i learned there."

A portion of the Bookreview.com: "In our minds we're all adventurers, and narratives that extol the virtues of finding one's own way can either make our own dreams more vivid and accessible or come off as self-satisfied and smarmy mirrors of ugly ego.

Enter William Least Heat-Moon, whose travels on the blue highways of America almost two decades ago made the aimless journey a spiritual and communal necessity. Now, he's taken on the "web of faint azure lines, a varicose scribing of my atlas" --- the rivers and waterways that extend nearly nonstop from the Atlantic coast to the Pacific Northwest.

The result, once again, is both spectacular and inspirational.

The four-month voyage, undertaken in a 22-foot motor boat equipped with two Honda engines, a kayak, and a canoe, springs from the depths of the soul, the journey motivated by the maps that Heat-Moon has taken as his Bible, their meanderings and interconnections his gospel. The outset is understated and oddly grandiose, the effect of a traveler truly passionate enough about his pursuit to become simultaneously (and paradoxically) arrogant and small. His copilot, Pilotis (one of seven people who accompanied the author throughout the trip and whom Heat-Moon grouped under the one name), records the occasion and the author responds:

"'And that's how it begins,' said my friend, a blue-water sailor, one whom I shall call Pilotis (rhymes with 'my lotus'). It wasn't, of course, the beginning, for who can say where voyage starts --- not the actual passage but the dream of a journey and its urge to find a way? For this trip I can speak of a possible inception: I am a reader of maps, not usually nautical charts but road maps. I read them as others do holy writ, the same text again and again in quest of discoveries, and the books I've written each began with my gaze wandering over maps of American terrain."

At better than 500 pages, one wonders why the author chooses "to skip details of how, during those two decades [of road travel], I discovered inch by inch a theoretical route a small vessel might, at the proper time of the year, pursue westward from the Atlantic an interior course of five thousand miles, equivalent to a fifth of the way around the world, ideally with no more than seventy-five miles of portage, to reach the Pacific in a single season." He skips very few other details of the journey, and that's a good thing. The observations and the historical asides accrete nicely to form the bigger picture."

Big and unusual words aside, I believe that it is a very worthwhile narrative about both the C Dory and Americana. I would recommend River Horse for the person who is considering buying one, since it does point out some of the limits and weaknesses of the breed.
 
Hunkydory":3vkzncng said:
so think we might be in the minority. Jay

Include me in with the minority...what does it take for a majority? :mrgreen:

It was a long time ago that I struggled through it (like Pat, I didn't complete it). Perhaps, I would have done better if I had read it while I was sitting at anchor somewhere with no distractions. Guess, my reading selections need more pzzzzazzz.

One book (although not related to C-Dorys or boats) that I suspect we could all agree on is The Greatest Generation by Tom Brokaw. I did read that while on the C-Dory and I couldn't be pried away from it!
 
Have to agree with Pat on this. It was one of the few books I didn't finish. In addition to "tedious" I found the author's approach less optimistic and adventurous in spirit than expected for such an endeavor. It was as though the author was reporting the experience in technical historical terms rather than something he was actually experiencing. However, it's been a while since I picked up the book so my memory may not do it the justice it deserves. (NOTE: that last sentence may indicate I should consider politics)

Harper
 
Mary and I loved the book, and it is the reason we learned about and now own a C Dory which has carried us nearly 10,000 miles since 2004.
 
Hey I enjoyed the book. Yep, it was a slow read...and that might just be why I enjoyed it. I read slow anyway. Yep, I did read a lot of the book while out on the water on one of the boats. Yep, it was a slow down from the fast pace life. Yep, it was not a heavy thinking book....again...another reason I liked it....

Don't feel bad my indigent care parent Pat.... I have to go to the dictionary often....even when just reading this site and some of our post. Sometimes, it is only to find it is not a word at all....but others like me who can not spell any better than myself. Other times, I find real simple words that would have been understood by most every reader.... you know... simple... like our boats. Never turn down a chance to learn.

I'll give the new book a read too.... but then, I do not think I have ever taken a book about a man and his boat and not enjoyed at least part of it. Can't say that about most of the stuff on TV today...

Do we really have to slam folks on here? Everyone being so damn different but with a common love for boats is what really draws me to this site.. I now realize that winter is starting to set in...or has set in for some... their boating days are limited or over till next "season".... post will get sharper, feelings a bit more on edge...some, angry rather than fun. Life goes on. Tides rise and fall.

Go spend time with a boating friend.

Thanks Bob about another boat read.

Byrdman
 
I think Least Heat Moon was an author who really wasn't a boat person. He just saw Riverhorse as a tool to achive a goal. That might explain his selective appeal to C-Brats in general. Generally the best boat books are written by boat people who are also authors. I've read his other books....at one time his goal was to set foot in every county of the US. Blue Highways, on the other hand, is a classic. To this day I try to eat in as many 'four calendar' restaurants as I can...
The part of 'Riverhorse' that especially appealed to me was the portion of the trip on the undammed and unchanneled Missouri from Sioux City to Yankton as I was one of the first people to do that section back in 1968.
Yankton (SD), by the way, is the hometown of Tom Brokaw.
 
Reading "Riverhorse" for me was like when I picked up the walnuts each night after school when I was a kid. You had to turn over every slimy husk to find the nut, if there was one. A tough read but worthwhile for some of the tidbits on different rivers and places to stop, and some of the what not to do's of boating. I know I would have been off that boat the first week if it had been me as crew on there.
 
Since Bob passed on the book to me and I have already read it, I would be glad to mail it to another brat here to "keep it in the family." Just message me direct and pay shipping is all I ask. I am in California.

Jeff
 
Speaking of Blue Highways.... My copy went off the forard deck of FREEBYRD one evening just after sunset on one of my cruise into the sunset alone nights on the TC24. This was prior to the much friendlier flatter fordecks on the TC255....

....with one motor just in gear, a cooler, a good book for reading about the last 30 minutes of daylight, a cusion to sit on, a towel to put little things on to keep them from sliding around...and somewhere between Southern Rock and Frank Sanatra playing on the CD....

Well, the evening dew got the deck wet/damp, had a tall cooler, so no need to go back in for a re-fill.....and about an hour into the dark, I droped the hand held remote to the auto pilot off the towel...and bingo in the drink it goes... I just grinned. I had her tied to the railing...and she was water proof. Then, on the lean over to get her, my foot hit the cooler, that was not tethered...a truly logistical mistake on my part. Well, that sent the cooler headed overboard, the Blue Highway being pushed away too... Well, those of know me realize that I had to catch the cooler. It was not empty and books can be replaced in time, and I could no longer read in the dark. Could use the cooler in the dark. Score: Blue Highway a wet ZERO. :thdown
Cooler with a couple left...ONE...and still on board. :thup :smile

Well, to date, that time to replace Blue Highway has not occured. Got flatter forward decks now. So, any used, water proven Blue Highway copies out there let me know.

I need a good winter read....other than this Younger Next Year book.

Byrdman
 
If you really love boats (and I mean really) you need to get 'Sailing Back in Time' by Maria Coffey and Dag Goering. A great book with great pictures as well that chronicles the life of a man (and his wife) who built over 40 boats from scratch from scrap while living an interesting life on the islands of the Georgia Strait.
 
I also had trouble with "River Horse". Interesting bits about the boat and the countryside but very depressing.

Patrick, you should try "I heard the Owl call my Name" by Margaret Craven and "Heart of the Raincoast" By Alexandra Morton and Billy Proctor.

If you really want to get your teeth into something try "The Pig War" by Michael Vouri. Roger (Dreamer) lent it to me during our cruise to the Broughtons in July and I am still beating my head against it. It's a great book but hard to finish!

Merv
 
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