Writers' Community!
Home Page Two Columnists Q&A Submit an Article FAQs Contact Author Login
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 7,783 Authors
70,502 Quality Articles
& 3,814 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
Mogama (16,433)
Bruce Horst (138)
Joel Hendon (17,877)
Michael Ramzy (633)
E. Raymond Rock (3,064)
Ira Coffin (7,406)
Connor Davidson (5,137)
Ben Morrish (8,401)
Steve Kovacs (4,388)
Sandra E. Graham (8,072)
Fran Larson (2,158)
Shari Vaudo (418)
David Tanguay (9,593)
Missing Link (708)

View All Featured Authors
Most Recent
M.A. Curtis Author Of Dominance & Delusion Discusses His Book With Bookpleasures.com

Review: Resumes for Children 17 Years Old And Under Yes, Really!

Review: The Passover Papers: Controversy, Myth, Fairy Tales, and Nonsense

Review: White Pearl and I: A Memoir of a Political Refugee

Meet Dr.R. L. Wysong author of Living Life As If Thinking Matters

Review: Midlife Mojo

Review: Shattered Realtity

Review: Deep Thinking The Human Condition: New Ideas We Can't Do Without

Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Anon

God's Land

Home » Categories » Literature » Non-Fiction » Review: The Last Schoonerman: The Remarkable Life of Captain Lou Kennedy » Printer Friendly

ngoldman

Review: The Last Schoonerman: The Remarkable Life of Captain Lou Kennedy

Rated 3 out of 5
No Reader Ratings Available ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by ngoldman
Submitted Wednesday, March 28, 2007
ngoldman (5,743)
ngoldman

Norm Goldman
Log in to become a member of ngoldman's Fan Club!




Author: Joe Russell

ISBN: 0-9789350-0-4

 

 

That it was possible during the middle of the twentieth century to profitably haul cargo between the Caribbean, Canada and the northeast USA with sailing ships similar to those used in the 1850s will probably come as quite a surprise to many of us today.

This was how the legendary Lou Kenedy, who owned and skippered ten vessels, earned his living from the age of twenty-one during the height of the Depression until he retired and sold his last schooner in 1985.

With his clear and simple style, Joe Russell invites his readers to share the personal experiences, escapades and hardships of Captain Lou Kenedy as he paints evocative images with his tales pertaining to each one of Kenedy’s schooners beginning with his first one, Abundance and ending with Sea Fox.

Russell in his The Last Schoonerman: The Remarkable Life of Captain Lou Kenedy depicts a world that is filled with excitement and much danger. And what a way to earn a living when you have to endure horrendous hurricanes, run-ins with the authorities, tragedies that at times ended in the death of some of your crew members, being attacked by German submarines during World War II, crewmen that get into all kinds of trouble, while at the same time keeping calm and making sure you don’t loose your sanity.

Russell gathered his material from boxes of photos, transcripts, magazine articles, log books, and family memorabilia that were sent to him from Kenedy’s daughter, Patsy who approached him offering the opportunity to write about her feisty father. It should be mentioned, as Russell asserts in the preface, that all his writing up to then was centered on cruising guides and destination pieces for Cruising World. In addition to these resources, Russell used material from a four-part, 1953-54 Saturday Evening Post series. The biography also includes many quotations from an interview conducted by Ralph Getson of the Lunenburg (Nova Scotia) Marine Museum Society that was recorded in the 1980s. And as Russell mentions, “Captain Lou Kenedy was, if anything, a master story teller, and he rarely missed an opportunity to entertain his listeners."

Rich with research and anecdote, this is a remarkable book depicting a character who exhibited a great deal of moxie or as Russell states, “this is a story of a man who successfully pounded a square lifestyle into a round society."  It should be pointed out that each chapter contains a brief description of each one of Kenedy’s schooners that includes its name, year of launching, rig, official number, builder, and material, length between perpendiculars, beam dimensions, draft dimensions and depth of hold. The book also contains a very useful glossary of nautical terms, the Beaufort Wind Scale, the 32 Points of the Compass and a comprehensive index.

Russell has done an excellent job of capturing the flavor of a by-gone era that we will never see again providing his readers with nuggets of fascinating tales of not only a unique individual but also of the sea with its unknowable beauty and terror.

The above review was contributed by:  NORM GOLDMAN:  Retired Title Attorney: Editor & Publisher of Bookpleasures. Here are  Norm Goldman's Reviews       


Norm Goldman is the Editor & Publisher of the Book Reviewing & Author Interviewing site bookpleasures.com. Bookpleasures.com comprises over 25 international reviewers that come from all walks of life and that review all genre.

Norm also offers a Fast Track & Priority Review Service. You can find out more about this service by clicking HERE.

 






Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of ngoldman's Fan Club!

Comments on this article: (2 total)


» left by Barbara & Ed True from Naples, Florida 34102 (2 years 42 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
I've know Brian Kenedy and his wife Barbara for many years. Throughout those years, Brian told me many wonderous stories about his Dad. And, of the many adventureous years, in his youth, being spent as one of his Dad's many deck hands. When the life of Brians father was published this past Dec., I couldn't wait to read it. The book kept me captive for several hours, forgoing both lunch and dinner to finish reading it. In turn, I purchased 4 more copies and gave them to friends as Christmas presents.

I had previously read the book "Adventure" about the life of Capt. Jim Sharp and the old Gloucester fishing schooner Adventure. His too is a great story, but Captain Lou Kenedy is the epitomy of the true definition of "Old Salt" in every respect. I feel as though I got to know him personally through his son Brians stories, but how I wish that I could have met this outstanding adventureous captain in the flesh.
Respond to this comment

» left by Peter S from Vineyard Haven (1 year 61 days ago.)
When I was a teenager working on the Vineyard Haven waterfront, I had the pleasure of meeting and sailing with Capt'n Kennedy and his wife after he retired. He had a beautiful Han-designed motorsailer and sailed from Florida to Nova Scotia each year and stopped into Vineyard Haven on his way. He was a wonderful story teller and I loved to sit in the evening and listen to his stories.

Respond to this comment

Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

This Article has been viewed 182 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on 3/28/2007 1:09:07 PM.
View other articles written by ngoldman (5,743)
ngoldman


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
Three Easy Steps to Sharing the Ideal Sister Poem

Oh, My Darling, Clementine

How to Find the Perfect Anniversary Poem

What Everyone Should Know About Friendship Poems

The Mystery of Water -- What Spiritual Force Attracted Me To the Old Well?

Daddy's Shoes - the Shoes That Carried Us Both Down the Aisle

What Everyone Should Know About Short Poems

Interview: Max & Monique Nemni Authors of Young Trudeau Son of Quebec, Father of Canada, 1919-1944.

How to Write the Perfect Wedding Poem

Dancing In The Dark

Viewed from Cache. Load Time: 0.016.

Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Questions & Answers  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2009 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company