John R Smith
02-12-2003, 08:10 AM
Friends
One of my hobbies connected with this boating passion is a search for classic boating books, of the second-hand variety, to complement my classic boat. Now, to be honest, I don’t take this book-collecting altogether too seriously, because I can see that it could become dangerously all-absorbing and horribly expensive.
But on a casual level I do enjoy spotting second-hand bookshops in places which we visit, and then spending a happy hour or so browsing dusty shelves in search of a vital tome. I am, I must admit, rather picky in my requirements – it must be yachting, cruising not racing, and never more recent than say the 1950s. Golden Era, no less.
Just after Christmas I struck gold in a local bookstore here in Truro. In the space of two days I got the following –
• Claud Worth’s “Yacht Cruising”
• Francis B Cooke’s “Cruising Hints”
• T Harrison Butler’s “Cruising Yachts” (1945 1st Ed)
• Maurice Griffiths’ “Post-War Yachting” (1945 1st Ed)
• Eric Hiscock’s “Wandering Under Sail” (1948 2nd Ed)
Which kept me happily reading away by the fireside in these long winter evenings, as you can imagine. All those books are well known, of course, but just occasionally I come across something pretty obscure (at least to me) which is even more fun. Yesterday it was a delightful little volume entitled “Sailing –a Guide for Everyman” by Aubrey de Selincourt, 1949. It’s a good read, the author is opinionated and the text very anecdotal, which is the way I like them, and even better there are numerous delightful line drawings by Guy de Selincourt.
http://www.imagestation.com/picture/sraid51/p01bf2cc41e55ba1531c5a89f7f551bbc/fca64dd1.jpg
I could be persuaded to scan a few more of these and share them with you, if you like. Does anyone know anything about Aubrey and Guy de Selincourt? (hint, hint, ACB or Ian W, perhaps). I have another really obscure one for you, but it’s so obscure I have forgotten the author’s name for the moment. Perhaps tomorrow . . .
;) John
One of my hobbies connected with this boating passion is a search for classic boating books, of the second-hand variety, to complement my classic boat. Now, to be honest, I don’t take this book-collecting altogether too seriously, because I can see that it could become dangerously all-absorbing and horribly expensive.
But on a casual level I do enjoy spotting second-hand bookshops in places which we visit, and then spending a happy hour or so browsing dusty shelves in search of a vital tome. I am, I must admit, rather picky in my requirements – it must be yachting, cruising not racing, and never more recent than say the 1950s. Golden Era, no less.
Just after Christmas I struck gold in a local bookstore here in Truro. In the space of two days I got the following –
• Claud Worth’s “Yacht Cruising”
• Francis B Cooke’s “Cruising Hints”
• T Harrison Butler’s “Cruising Yachts” (1945 1st Ed)
• Maurice Griffiths’ “Post-War Yachting” (1945 1st Ed)
• Eric Hiscock’s “Wandering Under Sail” (1948 2nd Ed)
Which kept me happily reading away by the fireside in these long winter evenings, as you can imagine. All those books are well known, of course, but just occasionally I come across something pretty obscure (at least to me) which is even more fun. Yesterday it was a delightful little volume entitled “Sailing –a Guide for Everyman” by Aubrey de Selincourt, 1949. It’s a good read, the author is opinionated and the text very anecdotal, which is the way I like them, and even better there are numerous delightful line drawings by Guy de Selincourt.
http://www.imagestation.com/picture/sraid51/p01bf2cc41e55ba1531c5a89f7f551bbc/fca64dd1.jpg
I could be persuaded to scan a few more of these and share them with you, if you like. Does anyone know anything about Aubrey and Guy de Selincourt? (hint, hint, ACB or Ian W, perhaps). I have another really obscure one for you, but it’s so obscure I have forgotten the author’s name for the moment. Perhaps tomorrow . . .
;) John