Thursday 28 February 2019

Top 10 reading about women and the sea

This is a writer's Top 10 books about women and the sea. Compiled by Charlotte Runcie, it appeared in The Guardian , 27 Feb 2019 and includes brief summaries of all the books.  
See https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/feb/27/top-10-books-about-women-and-the-sea#comment

As someone who knows about the huge range of gendered maritime history I find the list to be mainly about the metaphysical sea. It's about the outsider's idea of the timeless sea as something one romantically gazes upon, rather than an element one works with, today. 
And it's very interesting and thought provoking. I hope people will add their own favorites.

1. Female Tars: Women Aboard Ship in the Age of Sail by Suzanne Stark (non fiction)
2. The Waves by Virginia Woolf (fiction)
3. The Water Cure by Sophie Mackintosh (fiction).
4. The Summer Book by Tove Jansson (fiction)
5. The Outrun by Amy Liptrot (fiction)
6. Petticoat Whalers: Whaling Wives at Sea by Joan Druett (non fiction)
7. Sea Journal by Lisa Woollett (autobiography)
8. The Gracekeepers by Kirsty Logan (fiction)
9. The Salt Path by Raynor Winn (autobiography)
10. Katie Morag’s Island Stories by Mairi Hedderwick(fiction)

The best of all, in my view

Commentators also recommended:

  • The Log of the S.S. The Mrs Unguentine by Stanley Crawford (fiction)  
  • El SIglo de las Luces (Explosion in a Cathedral, usually, in English) by Alejo Carpentier (fiction).
  • Ahab‘s Wife, Sena Jeter Naslund (fiction) 
  • Watercolour Sky (fiction) William Riviere
  • The Island of Sea Women by Lisa See (fiction)
  • Diving Belles: And Other Stories by Lucy Wood (fiction)



New suggestions are being added by the hour so I recommend that you keep visiting the site for some really good ideas.



NOTE
Runcie is a journalist and the writer of a new book: Salt on Your Tongue: Women and the Sea. (Canongate, 2019)

It is described as:
  •  'A lyrical exploration of the sea, how it inspires art, music and literature and how it connects us' 
  • 'An ode to the ocean, and the generations of women drawn to the waves or left waiting on the shore'.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Love the topic. May I suggest My Year Before the Mast, by Annette Brock Davis? She managed to make a Cape Horn voyage as a sail trainee in 1933. She was offered a job as an ordinary seaman after that first voyage, but fate intervened.

https://www.amazon.com/Year-Before-Annette-Brock-Davis/dp/0888822073

Anonymous said...

Love this post! Female Tars is on my shelf already, it is wonderful! May I suggest My Year Before the Mast, by Annette Brock Davis? She made a voyage around Cape Horn in 1933 as a sail trainee. She was offered a job as an ordinary seaman after that, but fate intervened. I'm also looking for more information about Jeanne Day, who stowed away in the Herzogin Cecilie in 1928. There are some tantalizing bits about her in Alan Villiers book Falmouth for Orders, and one magazine article, but she falls out of sight around 1930 in London.

https://www.amazon.com/Year-Before-Annette-Brock-Davis/dp/0888822073

Anonymous said...

Love this post! Female Tars is on my shelf already, it is wonderful! May I suggest My Year Before the Mast, by Annette Brock Davis? She made a voyage around Cape Horn in 1933 as a sail trainee. She was offered a job as an ordinary seaman after that, but fate intervened. I'm also looking for more information about Jeanne Day, who stowed away in the Herzogin Cecilie in 1928. There are some tantalizing bits about her in Alan Villiers book Falmouth for Orders, and one magazine article, but she falls out of sight around 1930 in London.

https://www.amazon.com/Year-Before-Annette-Brock-Davis/dp/0888822073