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Saga of Cimba is my favorite. It's not the story that I like so much, it's
the wonderful way in which Maury describes the joys of being at sea that I love. "Qwerty" wrote in message ... "DirtCrashr" wrote in message ... the Swallows and Amazons series. Wow! I read those when I was a kid, overseas, almost forty years ago -- it suddenly comes back. I think that's when I first wished to go sailing. I remember the idea of lights in-line, guiding a boat into a harbor at night. My brother and I used to make maps of imaginary harbors with rocks and secretive "light-lines" that would enable passage. Our land-based adventures as kids of that age group were pretty similar. -keith mtn. view There must be many of my generation (don't ask) who's first stirrings of wanting to sail and go to sea were stimulated, even initiated by Arthur Ransome and those books; I know I was. I introduced my children to them but somehow, it didn't work with them - a bit dated perhaps if the original urge isn't there, and a character called 'Titty' didn't help. They are based on the east coast of England and the north west lake district where he eventually retired to. He led an interesting life, was in Russia as a correspondent for the Manchester Guardian at the time of the Bolshevik revolution; interviewed Lenin; married Trotsky's secretary. After he died she went back to Russia, a very old lady, and found, after a lifetime of living in England and only speaking English that she could no longer remember how to speak Russian. Q. |
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