Myron Arms is writer, lecturer, and professional small-boat sailor. His previous books include the best-seller Riddle of the Ice, and more recently Servants of the Fish. He has published numerous articles in Cruising World, Blue Water Sailing, and many other sailing and adventure magazines. Readers may sample his other writing and sailing adventures at www.myronarms.com .
"True North is the latest in the slight but remarkable oeuvre of
Myron Arms. Teacher, sailor, explorer, writer, his previous work
includes Riddle of the Ice (1998), Cathedral of the World (2000),
and Servants of the Fish (2004). I am embarrassed to admit that I
have read none of these books. Considering the length and breadth
of my reading on marine subjects, how they escaped me is a mystery.
However, if you are in my regrettable state, True North is a
perfect introduction to Arms' work . . . The ambitious itinerary
gives you an indication of the breadth of Arms' preferred cruising
grounds as well as his curiosity. But he wasn't just cruising and
he wasn't just curious. A high school teacher in the 1970s, he
traded in the classroom for his first blue water boat and founded
(and led) a program of 'sea learning' experiences. As a licensed
Coast Guard ocean master, he sailed with hundreds of teenagers for
the next five years. While aboard, they conducted a variety of
scientific experiments. 'The teacher was the sea...It was the
beginning, really, of my own emerging awareness of the stresses
being suffered by virtually all of the world's marine
environments.'"-- "Maine Harbors (Reviewer: Carol Standish)"
"After lifelong sailor Myron Arms finished building his 50-ft
cutter, he set off to the northern seas in search of adventure.
Over the next two and a half decades he found isolated cultures,
new companions, harsh weather and an enchanting pilgrimage that
took him on the route of an ancient Irish warrior, Saint Brendan.
Written as a series of 16 personal esseays, True North will leave
you entranced with its tales of ice, mystery and hardship on some
of the world's most challenging waters." -- "Sail Magazine
(Reviewer: Meredith Laitos)"
"As the essays follow the journeys of Brendan's Isle over the
years, scientific information and analysis becomes more of a
narrative focus than the more simple pleasures of the beauty of the
physical world and the exhilaration of sailing. With this focus,
the text becomes more engrossing, the journey more unique and
urgent and ages of the crews grow up-from high-school-ers to young
adult 'sail-trainees.' What they discover over the course of more
than twenty years is that in an environment that at first seems
huge, fierce and implacable is as vulnerable as an alpine
flower.
The northern seas were never meant to be lived upon by humanity,
but that never stops some people. True North Journeys Into the
Great Northern Ocean tells the story of life in the northern seas
from Myron Arms as he reflects on his times in the northern
Atlantic through essays on his adventures. A new perspective on
ocean life and the arctic circle, True North is an entertaining and
intriguing read that should not be ignored."-- "Midwest Book Review
(Reviewer Micah Andrew)"
"Veteran sailor Arms (Servants of the Fish) writes a notable
collection of essays of the sea and sailing in the far reaches of
the Great Northern Ocean, braving the frigid waters and dodging the
dangerous ice fields. His trusty boat, Brendan's Isle, and his
sturdy crew, which includes his youngest son, Steve, move through
these cold crossings with few perilous incidents, maintaining watch
and the standard sea responsibilities. Arms's narrative is rich,
descriptive, almost poetic, and full of voyaging on the water as he
journeys along the fiords of northern Labrador to western Greenland
and among the fishing villages of the Faroe Isles. Much more than a
slight travelogue, the book hits its stride when Arms cautions
against 'expanding human waste, changing atmosphere chemistry,
disappearing species, rising sea surface temperatures, thinning sea
ice, and melting glaciers.' (Jan.)
-- "Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All
rights reserved."
"Veteran sailor Arms delivers a richly descriptive, almost poetic
collection of essays about sailing up and down fiords from northern
Labrador to western Greenland and among the fishing villages of the
Faroe Isles. The sturdy crew of his trusty boat, Brendan's Isle,
included his youngest son, Steve."-- "AARP Magazine "Books for
Grownups" Column"
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