Subscribe"Then the starboard watch board the main tack, and the larboard watch lay forward and board the fore tack and haul down the jib sheet, clapping a tackle upon it if it blows very fresh."
"When all was right, the bunts were triced well up, the yard-arm gaskets passed, so as not to leave a wrinkle forward of the yard -- short gaskets, with turns close together."
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Patrick O'Brien's work is fictional, of course, but much of it is based on real-life. His pre-Aubrey and Maturin novels, The Golden Ocean and The Unknown Shore both detail the ill-fated voyage of Commodore Anson as he attempted to circumnavigate the globe. Great stuff, again.
There's always Thor Heyerdahl's Kon-Tiki stuff, too. (And if you've got Netflix, you can get the hour-long film documentary of his voyage across the Pacific on raft.) And don't forget all the great stuff about expeditions to Antarctica. Is it Endurance that relates all of Shackleton's woes. Again, great real-life adventure.
Moby Dick is, believe it or not, also based on fact. And, to the woe of readers everywhere, is filled with more actual fact than people usually care to read. ("The whiteness of the whale? No thanks...")
I'm anxious to read other replies. I love nautical fiction and non-fiction. It's stirring stuff.
posted by jdroth at 4:16 PM on April 28, 2004