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Second Wind

A Sunfish Sailor, an Island, and the Voyage That Brought a Family Together

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A charming memoir of midlife by the bestselling author of Mayflower and In the Hurricane's Eye, recounting his attempt to recapture a national sailing championship he'd won at twenty-two.
“There had been something elemental and all consuming about a Sunfish. Nothing could compare to the exhilaration of a close race in a real blow—the wind howling and spray flying as my Sunfish and I punched through the waves to the finish.”

In the spring of 1992, Nat Philbrick was in his late thirties, living with his family on Nantucket, feeling stranded and longing for that thrill of victory he once felt after winning a national sailing championship in his youth. Was it a midlife crisis? It was certainly a watershed for the journalist-turned-stay-at-home dad, who impulsively decided to throw his hat into the ring, or water, again.
With the bemused approval of his wife and children, Philbrick used the off-season on the island as his solitary training ground, sailing his tiny Sunfish to its remotest corners, experiencing the haunting beauty of its tidal creeks, inlets, and wave-battered sandbars. On ponds, bays, rivers, and finally at the championship on a lake in the heartland of America, he sailed through storms and memories, racing for the prize, but finding something unexpected about himself instead.
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    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2018
      In a new edition of a book first published in 1999, the National Book Award-winning author recalls a "watershed" year in the early 1990s when he seriously took up sailing, a sport he had abandoned when he was in his 20s.At the time, Philbrick (Valiant Ambition: George Washington, Benedict Arnold, and the Fate of the American Revolution, 2016, etc.) was a stay-at-home dad working on a book about Nantucket, where he and his wife and two kids lived, while his old, "dirt-encrusted" Sunfish, the "VW bug" of sailboats, leaned against the house. Deciding to spiff it up and get back on the water, the author set a goal of competing in the 1993 Sunfish North Americans, to be held the following July "on a man-made lake in Springfield, Illinois." To get back in shape, Philbrick hauled the boat to one after another of Nantucket's many ponds and, during the winter, rented a boat to compete in a regatta in Florida. The narrative is wryly honest. The author performed respectably in Florida and Illinois, but he didn't blow the competition away in any last-minute comebacks. Instead, he took pleasure--and pain--in the experiences of sailing on a regular basis. He describes with infectious joy the experience of catching a stray bit of wind or surging over the waves in a harbor, and he relays with astonishment the luck he feels at having survived some questionable sailing choices. Since much of his sailing was done under adverse conditions--in water so cold that he had to break the ice to sail or in air so still that races were postponed because boats couldn't move--readers will feel lucky to share the experiences vicariously. The author keeps his chapters short and punchy, and his obscure sailing terminology to a minimum, while revealing much about his connection to a supportive if sometimes-skeptical family.An amiably witty book about sailing that will appeal as strongly to the uninitiated as to the addicted.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2018
      Historian Philbrick (Valiant Ambition, 2016) recounts how, at age 36, he attempted to rejuvenate his youthful glory days as a competitive, indeed championship, racer of Sunfish sailboats. Prompted by his children's taunt to get a life in 1992, Philbrick stepped outside his and his wife's Nantucket home to contemplate the mold-covered, vine-entangled Sunfish in which he had triumphed in the 1978 North American Sunfish regatta, and he decided to race again in 1993. Philbrick began to practice, mini-adventures he suffuses with nautical jargon, descriptions of the Nantucket land- and seascape, and his recurrent self-questioning of why he was doing this. He enlisted his kids and wife in the project, offering wry observations on how their responses to his training regime ranged from the dubious to the supportive. In a race in Florida, Philbrick finished fifteenth, good enough to encourage his hopes for the championship, held in Springfield, Illinois, of all places. Describing his races tack-by-tack and gust-by-gust, Philbrick crosses the finish line with sure-to-be satisfied readers interested in sailing and the personal life of this highly popular author.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

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