The Years of Living Wet - John Huetter - Dog Ear Publishing
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BUY The Years of Living Wet

Paperback, $20.00
ISBN: 978-159858-801-9
368 pages

BUY The Years of Living Wet

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About The Book
 
Book Reviews

“Some years ago, having little or no money in my purse and nothing particular to keep me on shore, I thought I would sail about a little and see the watery part of the world.”

-Ishmael, Moby Dick, by Herman Melville, 1846.

Has so little changed in 150 years? Finding myself unattached and wandering in the international technology arena, I sold my Victorian-era home, built in 1900 by a sea captain four blocks from San Francisco Bay, and went searching for a boat of my own. After months, I found a British-built catamaran that met my long list of desired on-board features floating in a "creek" of Chesapeake Bay near Annapolis.

There was snow on the ground when I first saw Quo Vadis.  Sea trials were sailed in gale force winds. The boat was snug inside, sailed flat and sure, and soon became my new home.  One of its best features was its ability to take me places I'd never been, where I would meet characters I could not have imagined--or made up. One of them was an exciting woman. We hooked up at a high school reunion: our 40th.  Now, I invite you to spend some time with a new, if vintage, skipper on this voyage of discovery.  The years go by quickly, I promise you.

-John Huetter

 

 

 

 

Love, luck (bad and good) and sailing--John Huetter weaves them into a lively cruising tale in "The Years of Living Wet".

-John Riise, Managing Editor, Latitude 38
California

...I've never read another account that comes close to conveying so well what it's actually like to go cruising--at least without convincing the reader not to.

-Dave Schoonmaker, Managing Editor, American Scientist
North Carolina

This is not just a book for sailors, although there is plenty of sailing stuff in it. This is a book about seizing your dream, taking risks and carrying through when turning back would be easier. It's also about food and friends and lovers and other things that interest non-sailors. Honest, descriptive, engaging--well worth reading for anyone.

-R. Hemphill
Washington, D.C.

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