[DOWNLOAD] "On the Water" by Nathaniel Stone " eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free

eBook details
- Title: On the Water
- Author : Nathaniel Stone
- Release Date : January 09, 2002
- Genre: Essays & Memoirs,Books,Travel & Adventure,Sports & Outdoors,Water Sports,History,United States,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 1314 KB
Description
“I take a stroke and lean back, gazing up into the jet skies, bejeweled by the moon  and the galaxies of stars.  The hull glides in silence and with such perfect balance  as to report no motion.  I sit up for another stroke, now looking down as the blades  ignite swirling pairs of white constellations of phosphorescent plankton. Two opposing  heavens.  ‘Remember this,’ I think to myself.”
 
 Few people have ever considered the  eastern United States to be an island, but when Nat Stone began tracing waterways  in his new atlas at the age of ten he discovered that if one had a boat it was possible  to use a combination of waterways to travel up the Hudson River, west across the  barge canals and the Great Lakes, down the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Mexico,  and back up the eastern seaboard. Years later, still fascinated by the idea of the  island, Stone read a biography of Howard Blackburn, a nineteenth-century Gloucester  fisherman who had attempted to sail the same route a century before.  Stone decided  he would row rather than sail, and in April 1999 he launched a scull beneath the  Brooklyn Bridge to see how far he could get. After ten months and some six thousand  miles he arrived back at the Brooklyn Bridge, and continued rowing on to Eastport,  Maine. 
 Retracing Stone’s extraordinary voyage, On the Water is a marvelous portrait  of the vibrant cultures inhabiting American shores and the magic of a traveler’s  chance encounters.  From Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where a rower at the local boathouse  bequeaths him a pair of fabled oars, to Vanceburg, Kentucky, where he spends a day  fishing with Ed Taylor—a man whose efficient simplicity recalls The Old Man and  the Sea—Stone makes his way, stroke by stroke, chatting with tugboat operators  and sleeping in his boat under the stars. He listens to the live strains of Dwight  Yoakum on the banks of the Ohio while the world’s largest Superman statue guards  the nearby town square, and winds his way through the Louisiana bayous, where he  befriends Scoober, an old man who reminds him that the happiest people are those  who’ve “got nothin’.” He briefly adopts a rowing companion—a kitten—along the  west coast of Florida, and finds himself stuck in the tidal mudflats of Georgia.   Along the way, he flavors his narrative with local history and lore and records  the evolution of what started out as an adventure but became a lifestyle. 
 An extraordinary  literary debut in the lyrical, timeless style of William Least Heat-Moon and Henry  David Thoreau, On the Water is a mariner’s tribute to childhood dreams, solitary  journeys, and the transformative powers of America’s rivers, lakes, and coastlines.