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A Unit of Water, A Unit of Time: Joel White's Last Boat
 
 
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A Unit of Water, A Unit of Time: Joel White's Last Boat [Paperback]

Douglas Whynott (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 1, 2000
In a time when racing boats are mass-produced from synthetic materials, a dying breed of craftsman continues to build wooden sailboats of astonishing beauty. Boatbuilding is an ancient art, and Joel White was a master. Son of the legendary writer E.B. White, he was raised around boats and his designs were as sublime and graceful as his father's prose. At a boatyard in Maine, White and his closely knit team of builders brought scores of his creations from blueprints into the ocean.

In June 1996, six months after being diagnosed with cancer, Joel White began designing the W-76, an exquisite racing yacht. It was his final masterpiece. Douglas Whynott spent a year at Brooklin Boat Yard, observing as this design took shape, first in sketches and then during the painstaking building of the wooden craft.

The result is the poignant tale of both a genius at work and the people devoted to his art. Evoking E.B. White's New England and its salty residents, A Unit of Water, a Unit of Time is a classic portrait of dignity, charm, and humble magnificence-and of a maritime community that keeps a vanishing world alive.


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

E.B. White and his son Joel both had a respect for beauty, simplicity, and practicality when it came to their work. For E.B., it was writing. He talks about these qualities in The Elements of Style, the classic guide to English-language usage, and he demonstrates them in works like Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little. For Joel, it was building and designing boats that are "simple of line yet sound in engineering, traditional above water and modern below." A Unit of Water, a Unit of Time is a touching, engaging look at the life, work, and influence of Joel White and the craft of boat making.

Whynott spent a year (June 1996 to July 1997) at White's boat yard in Brooklin, Maine. At the time, White was battling cancer, nearing the end of his life, and designing what would be his last boat, the W-76, a wooden racing yacht with "sublime lines and exquisite rigging." A Unit of Water, the result of that experience, traces White's life from his birth in 1930 to his childhood spent in New York and Maine, his naval architecture studies at MIT, and his eventual move to Brooklin, where he began working at the small boat yard that eventually became his own. In the early '80s, White and his crew stopped making fiberglass boats in favor of wooden ones; Brooklin, headquarters for WoodenBoat magazine and the WoodenBoat School, became the center of the wooden-boat revival and White something of a boat-building guru. The book looks closely at the art of boat making--shaping deck beams, making bronze chocks, boring holes through sternposts--and the many characters in the Brooklin boat-building community. It's very interesting stuff, and Whynott tells the story simply and thoughtfully, emulating White's philosophies. He also describes White's health battles with respect and poignancy and without getting overly sentimental.

Joel White was a man of few words who tended to downplay his accomplishments, but they shine through in A Unit of Water. One Brooklin boat builder, describing the "soul" of boats, could have been describing White: "Boats are live. They talk. The more poorly made boats talk more. The best-made boats don't talk as much. They're quiet--quiet soldiers, they call them." --Andy Boynton --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Even readers with no special interest in boats are likely to be caught up in this elegant homage to Maine boatbuilder Joel White (son of E.B. White), who pursued his obsession with the time-honored craft of designing wooden boats while battling cancer. Whynott (Giant Bluefin) made 17 trips to the Brooklin Boat Yard in Maine, where the meticulous Joel, his son Steve and a yard crew spent two years designing and building the W-76, a grand and graceful racing yacht. While Steve runs the yard, JoelAwith a section of his lung removed and walking on crutches after a bone graftAundergoes chemotherapy and learns to walk again, enduring metastatic lung cancer with stoic fortitude. Whynott, who traces his own love of boats back to his Pilgrim ancestors, indelibly captures such laconic New England types as boat painter Raymond Eaton, who, whenever asked how a job came out, always replied, "It could be better." Old-timers mingle with boat-loving transplants from Wall Street, Oregon and England. With understated grace, the author evokes a sense of maritime community as well as a fierce devotion to boats and a love of the sea, which emerges as an almost mystical form of communion with nature and the cosmos. His father, who sailed a 30-foot cutter, instilled in Joel not only his love of sailing but also, according to Whynott, a clarity of line and economy of style that resonated in Joel's boat designs and in his essays for WoodenBoat magazine. Joel's death in 1997, months before the launch of the W-76, is heartbreaking. E.B. White would have approved of this quietly profound book: it's a real beauty.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Washington Square Press (May 1, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0671785265
  • ISBN-13: 978-0671785260
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.5 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #732,377 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Douglas Whynott's books take place in New England and tell stories about the work that people do there. His first book, Following the Bloom, follows Andy Card, owner of one of the largest migratory beekeeping operations in the US, through a season of commercial beekeeping while telling about the honeybee and issues in beekeeping. In Booklist a reviewer wrote of Following the Bloom, "This enthralling book...although factual, evokes transcendental contemplation and daydream." In Giant Bluefin Doug Whynott wrote about the bluefin tuna fishery on Cape Cod, and in The New York Times a reviewer stated that Whynott "celebrates the wonder of these fish most expressively in these pages." In A Unit of Water, A Unit of Time, Doug Whynott wrote about a boatyard in Maine owned by Joel White, son of E. B. White. A review in the San Francisco Chronicle praised this best-selling book by saying "Whynott attention transcends his ostensible subject until it becomes a profound look at the human condition." In his fourth book, A Country Practice, Whynott was behind the scenes at a rural veterinary practice in New Hampshire. A writer in the Portsmouth Herald stated that A Country Practice was a "book to be enjoyed by anyone who loves animals and a must for aspiring veterinarians." Booklist called it "the best introduction to veterinary life since James Herriott."

Doug Whynott has written for Smithsonian, Discover, Outside, The New York Times, and other publications. He lives in New Hampshire and spends his spare time hiking in the mountains or playing music--during his student years he was a concert piano tuner at the University of Massachusetts. He now teaches writing at Emerson College in Boston. You can read more about Doug Whynott at www.DougWhynott.com.

 

Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars For lover's of wooden boats and the Maine coast, September 9, 1999
By A Customer
It is hard for me to imagine how Douglas Whynott was able to so skillfully capture the subtleties of the lives of the people he met in Brooklin, Maine. Without overly romanticizing his subjects, he shows these boatbuilders and boat owners as they are. At times the structure of the book seems to imitate the way life is approached Down East: things wander off sometimes, but eventually whatever is supposed to happen, does happen. I envy that Whynott got to go sailing on some of the most beautiful boats sailing those waters. Good job, Doug.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Life in a Boatyard, December 26, 2000
As someone who has spent time scraping and painting the bottom of a large sailing boat, this book brought back all the sights and sounds of a boatyard. I could smell the dust and paint fumes, feel the smoothness of varnished rails, and sense the excitment when each boat was hoisted into the water. This book should interest all aspiring boat builders, and prepare them for the painstaking work of boat design, construction and restoration.

Wynott does a superb job describing the interpersonal dynamics of a boatyard's personnel and the importance of good management. Though I found myself irritated at Steve, Joel White's son, for spending his winter in the Carribean during his father's last year, Steve's management style is instructive for leading a group of talented artisans, be they boat builders, scientific researchers, or writers.

I savored every page of this short book, sometimes reading each section twice as not to miss the rich details. It made me laugh, such as the passage about novice sailors who they ended being towed into port and decided to buy a boat anyway, and cry -- Joel's death. I recommend it highly for all who find satisfaction in "messin' around with boats." This book squarely dispells what every boat owner already knows: Boating only looks romantic!

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good for fans of sailing, Maine, and E.B. White, August 18, 1999
By A Customer
This book combines information about designing and building wooden sailboats in Brooklin, Maine, with the story of three generations of the White family: E.B. White, the writer who sailed in his spare time; Joel White, the boat designer and builder who wrote about boats in his spare time; and Steve White, who expanded and runs the boatyard his father started. The book appeals to readers on many levels but had too much detail and too many technical terms about boat building for a lay person like me. As the story of the comeback of wooden sailing boats in the 1990's and a peek into the life of the White family in Maine, it succeeds very well. Readers who liked this book might also enjoy "The Survival of the Bark Canoe" by John McPhee.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
It's a good day for sailing, at Center Harbor in Brooklin, Maine. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
sardine carrier, inner keel, bow profile, sheer clamps, launching day, sardine factory, cold molding, fin keel, toe rails, boat yard, enclosed head, ketch rig, bedding compound, sail plan, small sailing craft, deck beams, teak deck, lobster boat, yacht design, cockpit seats
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Center Harbor, Joel White, The Mantelpiece, Pete Chase, Nite Bird, Tim Horton, Blue Hill, Brooklin Boat Yard, Brian Larkin, Brian Stevens, Bob Stephens, Quiet Tune, Andy Fiveland, Arno Day, Benjamin River, Rick Clifton, New York, Paul Waring, Doug Hylan, Norm Whyte, Henry Lawson, Maynard Bray, Steve White, Buzzards Bay, Frank Hull
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