Sunday, July 7, 2019

San Diego: hiding in plain sight; books read

       Sunday evening and Quivira Basin is quiet.  A single kayaker is on the water.  Quite a contrast with July 4 and yesterday.  The holiday weekend is over and everyone—well, almost everyone—has returned to their unreal ‘real’ lives.   I have returned to GANNET.
        Carol had an early flight back to Chicago.  I stayed in the hotel room to watch the final of the Women’s World Cup.  The US women are superior and deserved the win.  I am not hung up on the nationalism.  The US spends more money on women’s soccer than any other nation and has the third largest population in the world to draw from.  That American women’s soccer is superior to American men’s, even considering that men’s soccer overall is much more competitive than women’s, is undeniable.
       I enjoyed being with Carol.  No surprise.  I always have in the twenty-five years I have known and loved her.  But I am glad to be back on GANNET.  No surprise.  I always have during the eight years I have owned her.  And I have always enjoyed being on the water.  Even somehow knowing I would during those long years of my landlocked childhood.
        Carol and I were on GANNET on July 4 and again yesterday afternoon.
        On the Fourth a kayaker came along side who recognized GANNET and by inference me.  We talked.  He displayed knowledge that he had indeed been following the voyage and he was complimentary.  As Carol, who is astute, noted afterwards, he did not offer and  I did not get his name.  A warning:  you are always welcomed to approach me, but in the future I will ask your name.  We are in this together.  I do recall that he grew up in Arlington Heights, a suburb of Chicago not far from Evanston, and now lives in Colorado.  
        He said among other things that I am a rock star of sailing.  I have heard that before, but not liking rock music am ambivalent.  I want to be the Bach of sailing.
        I do not deny that it is pleasing to be recognized, but it is also pleasing not to be recognized, as none of the paddlers and kayakers who pass by GANNET, and occasionally bump into her, do.  I expect that they see a slim old man standing in the companionway or sitting on a Sportaseat on a small boat and think that it is nice that he still has these quiet moments of enjoyment on the water.  I am pleased that they have no idea of what GANNET has done.  That of all the more than a thousand boats in this basin, she has sailed the farthest.  And that I have sailed farther than everyone else in this bay and probably San Diego Bay combined as well.  And not just farther, but harder.
        Yesterday we rented a bike for Carol and rode Mission Beach from one end to the other.  I like being here so much.


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       As long time readers know every six months I post the books I have read.
       I am a reader, but I read more on passages than on land when there are distractions such as the Women’s World Cup.  I observe of myself that I have finished only four books in the now more than two months since I reached land.  During the passage I often read one a day.  I am knowingly in one of the great transitions of my life and I am feeling my way forward as all of us do.
        So here is the list.  
        Of all these, the one you are most likely not to know and that I particularly liked is ALL THE LIGHT WE CANNOT SEE.
        THE AENEID is the equal of Homer and I had read Conrad’s ALYMAYER’S FOLLY so long ago that it was a new book to me.

January 2019

APPOINTMENT IN SAMARRA  John O’Hara
BABYLON BERLIN   Volker Kutscher
THIS THING OF DARKNESS   Harry Thompson
ALL THE LIGHT WE CANNOT SEE   Anthony  Doerr
DECEMBER 1941   Craig Shirley
BIRDMEN   Lawrence Goldstone
THE PATH BETWEEN THE SEAS   David McCullough
LAST NIGHT   James Salter
GONE FOR SOLDIERS   Jeff Shaara
THE WANDERING FALCON    Jamil Ahmad
CITY OF SCOUNDRELS   Gary Krist
MAYFLOWER   Nathaniel Philbrick
NIGHT SOLDIERS   Alan Furst
FACES AND MASKS   Eduardo Galeano
CENTURY OF THE WIND   Eduardo Galeano
PARIS IN THE PRESENT TENSE   Mark Helprin
  ANNAPURNA   Maurice Herzog
FARTHEST NORTH   Fridtjof Nansen
THE GUN   C. S. Forester
A TIME TO STAND:  The Epic of the Alamo   Walter Lord
ONE NIGHT IN WINTER   Simon Sebag Montefiore
THE INDISPENSABLE COMPOSERS   Anthony Tommasini
MARCH   Geraldine Brooks
THE YOUNG LIONS  Irwin Shaw
GOD’S SECRETARIES   Adam Nicolson
THE WRITTEN WORD  Martin Pulchner
THE AENEID    Virgil  translated by Robert Fitzgerald 
THE SILENT DEATH   Volker Kutscher
THIS GULF OF FIRE   Mark Moleskt
THE PLAYER’S BALL   David Kushner
THE LADY AND THE UNICORN   Tracey Chevalier
APPEASEMENT   Tim Bouverie
ALMAYER’S FOLLY   Joseph Conrad