Skip to content
Hardcover Sloop: Restoring My Family's Wooden Sailboat: An Adventure in Old-Fashioned Values Book

ISBN: 0743202392

ISBN13: 9780743202398

Sloop: Restoring My Family's Wooden Sailboat: An Adventure in Old-Fashioned Values

Select Format

Select Condition ThriftBooks Help Icon

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$6.89
Save $18.11!
List Price $25.00
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!

Book Overview

Now in paperback, Daniel Robb's Sloop proves he "is a craftsman... with words as well as with a hammer, as he constructs a charming tale that both details the technical nature of boatbuilding and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Like Sharing the Author's mind

This book should appeal to any reader, but will be especially alluring to anyone who's ever done anything with their hands. The process of rebuilding the boat is somewhat about the boat, but far more about the people with whom the author comes in contact. The writer's learning curve is dependent on the condensed experience available to him through his friends and acquaintances. It's like mixing the perfect martini: blending together what he learns from others, and how he conveys that to the reader that makes this book an interaction between the writer and the reader that is savory. You want to be hanging out in the coffee shop with these people. I highly recommend this; it will enrich your life. Maybe change it, too.

Sloop: restoring my family's wooden sailboat

One of the best books on the love of traditional boats (particularly classic boats like the Herreshoff 12 1/2). I will enjoy reading this book again! Highly recommended.

The boat as a metaphor

While the world tilts and shrinks, our contact with the real things of this world, like wood and metal, like the wind and wave, get to be less and less. Daniel Robb doesn't want to lose touch with those things, so he provides readers with this excellent and thoughtful book. Part carpenter's manual, part memoir, part philosophical treatise, Sloop is thought provoking and tremendously readable. Daniel points out that the sloop in question, a Hereschoff 12 1/2, was a product of a transitional age - as the world was moving from natural to manufactured propulsion. Our own age is similarly transitional, and this is his starting off point for a number of meditations on the durability of man-made goods, and the old fashioned values of craftsmanship. He contrasts these with the challenge of the modern - when is "good enough" good enough? Maybe because we share a few childhood memories, a first name, or maybe because we're both human - Daniel's detailing of the honest hesitation he experienced in what might otherwise be a straightforward restoration carpentry project spoke to my own experience - not of boatbuilding, but of life. The only thing bad one can say about Daniel's memoir of boat building in Woods Hole is that he changes the names of most of the other people he meets and works with. Which, for a small town memoir, is probably a good thing, but for a reader intimately interested in said small town, well, one can't help but wonder who's who.

I could not put this down.

This book was a gift and I could not put it down. Through a narrative the author draws into question our modern frentic lifestyle and finds folks who are able to find fulfillment doing what they love. The boat would seem to be the focus of the book, but the value is in the relationships with the other characters. I loved the soul searching when faced with the decision to restore the boat to museum quality versus making it functional again. An easy read, this is the first book I've read to completion in a long time.
Copyright © 2023 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured