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8 Men and a Duck : An Improbable Voyage by Reed Boat to Easter Island
 
 
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8 Men and a Duck : An Improbable Voyage by Reed Boat to Easter Island [Hardcover]

Nick Thorpe (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 10, 2002

On a fateful South American bus trip, journalist Nick Thorpe overheard some fellow passengers discussing an improbable plan to sail 2,500 miles from northern Chile to Easter Island on the Viracocha -- a boat made of reeds. The crew's aim in reviving this pre-Incan boat-building technology was twofold: to reopen the controversial migration theories of Thor Heyerdahl, who sailed his boat the Kon-Tiki from Peru to Polynesia in 1947, and to have one heck of an adventure in the process. Thorpe talked his way on board Captain Phil Buck's Viracocha only to find himself plagued by uncertainty. Why did the crew include a tree surgeon, a jewelry salesman, and two ducks? What happened to the navigator? Did anybody actually know how to sail? And, most important, where was the life raft?

8 Men and a Duck charts this hilarious and un-nerving Pacific voyage as it rolls between waves of high drama and high farce: from the five-day launch off a Chilean beach to the bungled phone call that triggered a naval rescue alert to the sad fate of Pedro the duck to the constant race against the inexorable sinking of the soggy hull.

Despite the best efforts of storms and sharks and fast-moving freighters, an alarming lack of sailing qualifications, and a rival explorer dogging the adventure at every turn, the crew members of the Viracocha lived to tell their extraordinary tale right through to its wickedly unexpected conclusion. Nick Thorpe's account is by turns funny, touching, and thrilling -- a story of friendship, fate, and the unlikely distances people will go for real adventure.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

When British travel writer and all-around thrill seeker Thorpe was traveling the wilds of Bolivia by bus, he passed the time by eavesdropping on a Frenchman talking to an Australian about a boat made of reeds. The conversation seemed more interesting than your average cross-cultural traveler exchange, so Thorpe listened intently as the Frenchman talked about legendary voyager Thor Heyerdahl and about continuing his legacy, about building this reed boat in Huatajata and sailing to Easter Island in it just eight men and a duck. Thorpe's enthusiasm for this insanity was such that he had to get involved. And not just as a documentarian: an original crew member dropped out, Thorpe dropped in and soon the journalist found himself making sails. The resulting narrative is witty, sad and as brave and daft as those who sail. Thorpe's British self-deprecation and eye for detail legitimize his passing comments on his fellow crew members, providing comic relief in an often claustrophobic text. A master of tension, Thorpe mingles storms, bruised egos, paranoia, food shortages, botched launchings, lamented loved ones and utterly inept seamanship into a tale of triumph against the odds. In Thorpe's hands, a travelogue becomes a comedy of errors, a farce, a Latinate epic and a picaresque tale. It's a warm, wonderful book, a story of enthusiasm superseding expertise in which Fate smiles favorably.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Scottish award-winning journalist and travel writer Thorpe happened upon this "improbable" adventure while riding a bus in Bolivia. He overheard a conversation about an ambitious voyage across the Pacific and instantly decided to join in. Phil Buck, the American who conceived and led the voyage, believed that Thor Heyerdahl's controversial migration theories could be proven with the Viracocha, a modern copy of a pre-Incan boat made of totora reeds. He recruited a local crew and employed local reed boat builders to make the craft. The only problem was that since reeds absorb water, the boat would start sinking as soon as it was launched. In this entertaining story of the 44-day journey, Thorpe recounts the many difficulties crew members encountered, such as storms and ship and shark sightings. Although the eight-man crew ultimately prevailed, when they reached Easter Island they learned that their sinking ship could not be saved and had to be burned. This well-written story is sure to be popular in public libraries. John Kenny, San Francisco P.L.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Free Press; First edition. edition (June 10, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743219287
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743219280
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.4 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,758,112 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fish out of water, June 4, 2002
By 
Evie Kostakis (new york, ny United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 8 Men and a Duck : An Improbable Voyage by Reed Boat to Easter Island (Hardcover)
Great story about a bunch of guys with who sail a reed boat from Chile to Easter Island. The journey reminds me of Tania Aebi's "Maiden Voyage" in both how generally clueless the crew is (few have ever been on a sailboat), and the tone of the story. Ostensibly the trip is about whether Easter Island could have been populated from South America, but the book really is about how 8 men (and a duck) interact with each other and themselves in a small hole in the water in the middle of the ocean. Everybody's character is exposed (the author is the neurotic) as they face 2000 miles of the Pacific over 2 months. Extremely entetaining with an excellent wit. I highly recommend it.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Lucky Ship of Fools, July 20, 2002
This review is from: 8 Men and a Duck : An Improbable Voyage by Reed Boat to Easter Island (Hardcover)
A couple of years ago, Buck determined to make the real voyage from Peru to Easter Island on an ancient style of reed boat, a voyage Thor Heyerdahl had contemplated but not accomplished. And, as the boat was built and the crew shifted, he happened to have one opening for an extra crewman. He was very lucky that Nick Thorpe, a Scottish travel writer, happened by chance to hear about the voyage while going through South America, for Thorpe became the expedition's chronicler, in _8 Men and a Duck: An Improbable Voyage by Reed Boat to Easter Island_ (Free Press). Thorpe inflated his novice sailing history in order to get the job, but in his funny tale, his ineptitude is about equivalent of that of his companions. Among them were a French Lothario, a Chilean master-of-none, and a Texas tree surgeon. Of course this was a "ship of fools;" Thorpe himself uses the phrase, but it is an engaging brand of foolishness. For this "oddest bunch of misfits ever to set foot on the high seas," it would not be a laughing matter if they had all drowned, and they did come close, but danger related here only heightens the humor.

Thorpe's account is full of things that did go wrong, many of which were not at all funny at the time. There were the trials of getting the twenty-ton ship to the ocean, and how she was stuck on her launching ramp for five days. When Thorpe's sails were finally raised, they were backwards. The electronic navigation and weather system did not work ("So far we would have been better holding a straw in the wind and guessing"). There is a shameful "Power Bar scandal - a chilling indictment of human behavior in an unregulated economy of confectionary snacks." A crew member snores "like the death rattle of a walrus." Of course there is a storm that is frightful to read about, and then just as frustrating, a time at the end when the opposite dread of sailors, a windless ocean, becalms the _Viracocha_. There are sharks. Throughout the book, the strangers on board do manage to become a sufficiently competent crew, and learn some valuable nautical lessons about depending on one's team.

Of course, there isn't much history here; ethnographers will not be readjusting their estimation of Pacific history based on this crew's voyage. There simply isn't much reason to have accomplished this feat (although after it is all over, Thorpe and the captain do manage a reverential visit to Thor Heyerdahl, who died two months before the book came out). Phil Buck has written an appendix here on how to build a reed boat, but readers will not be inspired to emulation. Buck had wanted to make such a trip ever since he was a kid, and whatever meaning there is in the attempt must be simply in the accomplishment of the task. That, and this resultant chronicle, a happy account of a mad voyage.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great book!, May 23, 2002
By 
Rod McCurdy (Thomasville, Alabama United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 8 Men and a Duck : An Improbable Voyage by Reed Boat to Easter Island (Hardcover)
A fun and exciting read! - the only expedition book I have ever been able to relate to! In all of the previous "expedition" books I have read, none have been so thoroughly humerous, dramtic and openly candid. In a magnificent triumph over the typical mauncho-driven accounts of glacier-crossing, sahara-crawls or other adventure-expedition books, the author captures the human side of doing something no one has dared or been able to do before. This book truly reminds the reader that we all have desires for adventure, and that we are all capable, even in the light of our own fears and incapabilities, to be an explorer. I loved the honesty, the humor, the drama and of course the storm and sharks! If you want to live a personal, real-life adventure, experienced within the space of humbling honesty - then read this book!
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The day Stephane Guerin materialized like an unshaven ghost from the exhaust fumes and clambered onto my bus, I had no reason to expect that he would alter my life. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
steering platform, sail system, reed boat, mast stay, maritime experience, plastic string
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Easter Island, Thor Heyerdahl, Lake Titicaca, Phil Buck, Mata Rangi, Rapa Nui, South American, Even Jorge, Fig Newtons, Uncle Chris, The Scotsman, Freddie Mercury, Hanga Roa, Hotel Chinchorro, Kon Tiki Viracocha, The Bus of Destiny
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