Voyaging the Pacific: In Search of the South

Voyaging the Pacific: In Search of the South

by Miles Hordern (Author)

Synopsis

Miles Hordern sailed alone in a 28-foot sloop across the Southern Ocean from New Zealand to Patagonia and back -- a voyage of 13,000 nautical miles across the largest stretch of water on earth and a region of icebergs, gales and high seas. Six weeks later he made landfall on the coast of Chile and, after a chance meeting, embarked on a 1,000-mile cruise southwards to survey channels and fjords in Patagonia, one of the last uncharted areas in the world. From Chile he sailed north on the Humboldt current, then west through the tropics on the return passage to New Zealand, arriving home some eighteen months after he had left. He conjures up the experience so vividly that we feel the motion of the boat and enter the lone sailor's state of mind. In his description, however, Miles Hordern journeys into the past as well as the present, recalling other mariners who have over the centuries sailed south in search of unknown lands and mythical treasure -- and what was believed to be the largest continent of all, Terra Australis. As he voyages through the calms and squalls of the South Seas the ghosts of castaway sailors, real and imaginary, follow in his wake.The result is a unique mix of history, myth and adventure that evokes the sea and its power as mesmerically as Conrad.

$38.13

Quantity

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Edition: New edition
Publisher: John Murray Publishers Ltd
Published: 07 Aug 2003

ISBN 10: 0719564891
ISBN 13: 9780719564895

Media Reviews
'Hordern writes vividly about the rhythms and sights of life afloat, and about a landscape composed not of immovable objects but of ever-shifting wind and water.' -- Daily Telegraph 'Beautifully written, fresh and surprising. Hordern has done a splendid job' -- Mail on Sunday 'As well as an enthralling adventure, the book chronicles an inner journey of self-discovery. Hordern captures the thrill, romance and anxieties of ocean sailing ... a highly readable book by a gifted new writer. Don't miss it' -- Yachting Monthly 'Not unlike Conrad, Hordern demonstrates that a sense of superfluousness often felt by the adventurous modern traveller can be - at great personal risk - transmuted into a kind of physical essentialism by excluding the rest of humanity and testing oneself, against onself, in extremis' -- Times Literary Supplement 'Full of humour and historical insight, this book has the toughness of the classic survivor. It's the next best thing to actually going yourself' -- Global Adventure
Author Bio
Miles Hordern was born in 1965 and grew up in land-locked Worcestershire. He learned to sail in the tidal waters of the Channel Islands and in a Midlands gravel pit. In 1988 he crossed the South Seas for the first time, working his passage on a 50-foot Australian ketch. Two years later he sailed single handed from Britain to New Zealand.