Daniel Duane



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Daniel Duane

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Average rating: 3.63 · 440 ratings · 73 reviews · 14 distinct works · Similar authors
Caught Inside: A Surfer's Y...
3.9 of 5 stars 3.90 avg rating — 242 ratings — published 1996 — 2 editions
How to Cook Like a Man: A M...
2.88 of 5 stars 2.88 avg rating — 67 ratings — published 2012 — 3 editions
Looking for Mo
3.54 of 5 stars 3.54 avg rating — 35 ratings — published 1998 — 2 editions
Lighting Out: A Vision of C...
3.85 of 5 stars 3.85 avg rating — 27 ratings — published 1994
A Mouth Like Yours
2.52 of 5 stars 2.52 avg rating — 21 ratings — published 2005
El Capitan: Historic Feats ...
3.67 of 5 stars 3.67 avg rating — 12 ratings — published 2000
Surf Oder Bretter, Die Die ...
by
2.25 of 5 stars 2.25 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2004
Surfers: Photographs
2.0 of 5 stars 2.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 1997 — 2 editions
Caught Inside Bookmarks: A ...
0.0 of 5 stars 0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
Surf
by
0.0 of 5 stars 0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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“I thought again about throwing language all over a scene, wondered if the emotional mystery of one's response to place doesn't lie in the inchoate play of possible words, of felt meanings and poetries, of the sublime, the romantic, the picturesque, Zen; even, perhaps, something new. And perhaps that twinge of disappointment one always feels at the words chosen - and thus also at the glorious scene-comes from the dream that in that instant of indecision and all-decision before your mind clarified its response to beauty, you just might have held within you language finally saturated with all the earth's meaning." Page 211”
Daniel Duane, Caught Inside: A Surfer's Year on the California Coast

“I thought how, with the peeling wave as an ideal of perfection, the surfer's object of passion becomes the very essence of ephemerality-not a thing to be owned or a goal to be attained but rather a fleeting state to inhabit. So much more of my time, after all, passed in the dreaming and searching than in the actual riding of waves; so much more time spent driving the coast and floating between sets. Of a whole year of devotion, probably no more than a day was spent truly on my feet and surfing, so I couldn't view such a moment as this without an ardent, frustrated desire, a near-religious craving for wholeness. Unlike so many other passions: while on might, I suppose, wish for a bloom to remain in blossom, for a ripening grape to hang always on the vine-yearnings John Keats made his own, for fleeting beauty and youth, the understandably hopeless hope that we might freeze our world's better moments-the wave's plenitude is rather in the peeling of the petal, the very motion of the falling fruit." Page 99”
Daniel Duane, Caught Inside: A Surfer's Year on the California Coast



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