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Running Away to Sea: Round the World on a Tramp Freighter [Paperback]

Douglas Fetherling
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Feb 22 2001
At a low point in his life, the prolific Canadian writer Douglas Fetherling sought to clear his head by taking the kind of trip that many of us dream about – going round the world on one of the last of the tramp freighters. The four-month voyage carried him (and a handful of other travellers) some thirty thousand nautical miles, from Europe via the Panama Canal to the South Pacific, a region with a future as fragile as its past is romantic. There the ship, a converted Russian ice-breaker renamed The Pride of Great Yarmouth, traded at some of the most fabled – and some of the most disreputable – ports in the southern hemisphere. The return voyage, by way of Singapore, Indonesia, the Indian Ocean, and Suez, was just as memorable.

Written with dash, colour, and droll humour, Fetherling’s narrative is peopled by a rich cast of characters, from the Foreign Legionnaires of French Polynesia to the raskol gangs of Papua New Guinea. Most memorable perhaps are the men and women who continue to follow the millennia-old life of the sea. This is the world of Ordinaries and Able-Bodied Seamen, but also of hopeful young officer cadets – to say nothing of, in this particular instance, a temperamental cook, a computer genius with a nose-ring, and a young Russian woman who believes herself the reincarnation of Marilyn Monroe.

Fetherling captures the reality of life aboard a working cargo ship – the boredom, the seclusion, the differences of nationality and culture that isolation and cramped quarters seem to exaggerate. But he also describes how the routine of loneliness or tranquillity is punctuated by moments of near-panic – shipboard fires, furniture-smashing storms, even a brush with pirates in the Strait of Malacca.

Running Away to Sea is literary travel-writing in the grand old tradition.

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Review

“A truly wonderful book. Fetherling at his best.”
–Bill Bryson

“A splendid seadog’s yarn.…Like John McPhee’s Looking for a Ship or Gavin Young’s Slow Boat to China, this wonderful, well-crafted book is ideal reading for a desert island or an armchair.”
Kitchener-Waterloo Record

From the Back Cover

“A truly wonderful book. Fetherling at his best.”
–Bill Bryson

“A splendid seadog’s yarn.…Like John McPhee’s Looking for a Ship or Gavin Young’s Slow Boat to China, this wonderful, well-crafted book is ideal reading for a desert island or an armchair.”
Kitchener-Waterloo Record

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Most helpful customer reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars Around the World with Oscar the Grouch July 15 2004
Format:Paperback
It's always been a mystery to me how someone who is writing a book in which he is the main character, can make that character (himself) come off as unlikeable or seriously unpleasant. After all, as the author you do have a great deal of control over the character, if not over your actual self.

The idea behind Douglas Fetherling's book is irresistible: an adult runs away from home by taking a round-the-world trip on a small freighter. Who hasn't fantasized about leaving home, family, and responsibilities, even if just for awhile? And the set-up is full of possibilities: a sullen Russian crew, about a dozen other passengers with various backgrounds, and stops in any number of exotic places. Top it off with some kind of an epiphany for our hero and voila!

But Fetherling has taken all these possibilities and apparently refused to improve on what really happened. Because what we end up with is an anti-social hero who despises all his shipmates. He admits that he is having trouble with the idea of becoming a grandfather soon, still in his late forties. He has never really liked being married, he declares (and evidently doesn't care what his wife thinks about him announcing that to the world). The constant vibration of the ship's engine makes him feel perpetually "goatish."

Fetherling is generous with his research, though, and each port of call gets us a history lesson. It would have been fun to read more about his adventures in port, even if he had to make some of them up.

When he finally returns home, he announces to his wife that he has decided to stay with her for now, evidently resigned to becoming a grandfather. But I wonder if his wife was any more impressed than the reader. And I wonder if any of the other passengers or crew has written their own book about the voyage. It still seems like a great idea for a book.

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By A Customer
Format:Paperback
I picked this up because it had a great premise. The book, however, did not live up its title or subject. There was quote after descriptive qoute from other authors about the far away places that Mr. Fetherling touched and some of the historical references were inciteful, but there just wasn't much meat concerning what the author saw and felt during HIS journey. He shyed away from the other passangers and it doesn't seem that he was friendly with the crew. His acount makes it seem like he took up space and made use of the oxygen around him for four months. His trip and the divorce that it probably contributed to was a bit on the depressing side. This is not why I read travel/adventure literature.
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3.0 out of 5 stars A travel book with a chic-left twist Dec 6 1999
Format:Hardcover
I found Running Away to Sea somewhat patronizing toward the reader, but still readable. Fetherling obviously looks at the world through glasses that are skewed to the political left. I'll wager Gore Vidal is one of his favorite authors. I envision Fetherling as a type of mildly depressed, chic-left, middle-aged, pseudo-intellectual ex-hippie who, if the truth were known, must grudgingly concede that the continuing demise of Communism has left us all far better off. His not so subtle put downs of every nationality except his own (Canadian) are particularly irritating. Being a good liberal, he is quick to advertise his holier-than-thou disdain for racism, but I find his arrogant and condescending attitude towards the French, British, and (especially) Americans to be a mild form of prejudice in itself. Too much of the book involves development of historical background for the ports his ship visits - a fact compounded by irritating editorializing from his socialist perspective. Still, the book flows well, and the reader anxiously anticipates each new chapter. I would buy Running Away to Sea again.
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