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The Boat Who Wouldn't Float

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Tired of everyday life ashore, Farley Mowat would find a sturdy boat in Newfoundland and roam the salt sea over, free as a bird. What he found was the worst boat in the world, and she nearly drove him mad. The Happy Adventure, despite all that Farley and his Newfoundland helpers could do, leaked like a sieve. Her engine only worked when she felt like it. Typically, on her maiden voyage, with the engine stuck in reverse, she backed out of the harbour under full sail. And she sank, regularly.

How Farley and a varied crew, including the intrepid lady who married him, coaxed the boat from Newfoundland to Lake Ontario is a marvellous story. The encounters with sharks, rum-runners, rum and a host of unforgettable characters on land and sea make this a very funny book for armchair sailors and landlubbers alike.

224 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1969

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About the author

Farley Mowat

113 books641 followers
Farley McGill Mowat was a conservationist and one of Canada's most widely-read authors.

Many of his most popular works have been memoirs of his childhood, his war service, and his work as a naturalist. His works have been translated into 52 languages and he has sold more than 14 million books.

Mowat studied biology at the University of Toronto. During a field trip to the Arctic, Mowat became outraged at the plight of the Ihalmiut, a Caribou Inuit band, which he attributed to misunderstanding by whites. His outrage led him to publish his first novel, People of the Deer (1952). This book made Mowat into a literary celebrity and was largely responsible for the shift in the Canadian government's Inuit policy: the government began shipping meat and dry goods to a people they previously denied existed.

The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society ship RV Farley Mowat was named in honour of him, and he frequently visited it to assist its mission.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 234 reviews
Profile Image for Metodi Markov.
1,712 reviews421 followers
October 7, 2025
Истинска находка излезе тази книга!

Фърли е страхотен разказвач, а историите му са интересни и много забавни!

Пътешествията му луди на малката, но много опърничава шхуна "Щастливо приключение" около Нюфаундленд и до ЕКСПО 67 в Монреал, са описани с жив език и премерена ирония. Различните чешити срещнати по пътя са връх, а патилата и приключенията им са уникални!

Солидното чувство за хумор на автора няма как да не ви разведри и напълно разбирам, защо г-н Моуът е един от най-обичаните канадски писатели у дома си и по света!

Препоръчвам, чете се с кеф и е лекарство срещу лошото настроение! ⛵️ 🇨🇦 🍁🐕

P.S. Фърли Моуът се оказа доволно издаван на български език автор и аз с удоволствие ще прочета и други негови книги.

Отдавна не бях се ровил толкова в интернет заради информацията от книга.

Четох за коренното население на Северна Канада, за викингите и контактите им с тях, после за баските, за видовете лодки и корабчета, за различни птици, риби и бозайници, за френската следа по тези земи, за местната география и климат, и още много… 💜

Книгата може да се прочете в Читанка.
Profile Image for Debbie Zapata.
1,975 reviews52 followers
December 18, 2015
Auctions are thrilling and dangerous places. On the spur of the moment you can buy all sorts of things you did not know you needed until the bidding starts. This is part of the reason Farley Mowat became the proud owner of most of the nautical equipment being auctioned off at a defunct Canadian chandler's shop back in the early 1960's.

And what do you do with tons of nifty equipment and supplies? Find a boat to match it, of course. Then you dream of sailing off to Bermuda or some other southern port, and work yourself ragged trying to make that dream come true.

This is the story of how Mowat found the ship to go with his gear. And all the happy misadventures that went along with that ship. She leaked. She had a cranky engine. She was stinky. Her cabin roof was so low that no one could stand up straight below decks. But she was Mowat's, and eventually they sailed together. Not to Bermuda or anywhere close to the dreamed of southern ports. But it turned out there was more than enough excitement right around Newfoundland to keep Mowat and his ship busy for years.

We get bits of history of the area, we meet the grand people (and some of the animals) who lived there, and we explore the Newfoundland coast. Along the way we do a little smuggling and a lot of
repair work. I enjoyed the whole journey very much, but I did feel a bit sorry for Mowat and all the situations he got into. Some were caused by weather, some were caused by temper, and some were just plain meant to be. This is one of those books sharing incidents that were frustrating at the time but that make you laugh a few years later. Sometimes even just a few hours later, if the smuggling went off properly (the main item smuggled at the time was alcohol).

I've read a lot of sea adventures, and I thought this was a wonderful book. I do wonder why Mowat describes his boat as 'snoring along' through the water at one point, though. In all the naval books I've read, no other ship had ever snored. But then, this was an eccentric vessel with a mind of her own. I suppose she simply had to snore.


Profile Image for Katherine.
112 reviews2 followers
December 25, 2019
I adore this book. I don't know if there are still books like this being read out there - well written, eloquent without being stuffy or pretentious and moments of beautiful writing that capture you in the story. I wonder if we have the patience for them if they aren't big and full of long, dull paragraphs, or short with little story to tell. But, if one is looking for a fun, self effacing, humorous look at life - with some truly magical passages of writing stuffed in between the exploits of a boat with a personality larger than she, this book will hold water - and your attention. Makes me want to run out and find Mr. Mowat's other books and pencil in some time to follow along on his journeys.
Profile Image for Esther.
351 reviews19 followers
December 26, 2021
Just delightful! Haven’t laughed out loud this much since reading the last Farley mowat! My dad used to read this to my brother at bed time and now I’m like wth why didn’t I get to be part of the ritual! Makes me so nostalgic for my dads Canadian boyhood, or how we’d have to take two separate ferries from Vancouver to visit my grandpa Bruce’s home on a small island. My family and I were going to take a week trip to Newfoundland last summer which was obvi cancelled bc of Covid but reading this book was another way to experience what that could have been! I really really hope to go back to the Canadian maritimes. Just a delightful book that makes me feel so connected to my family and grateful that I live in a part of the country where the outdoors is so much more accessible
8 reviews1 follower
February 15, 2009
One of the few books that had me laughing out loud while I was reading it. My grandfather suggested in to me and told me it made him laugh. I was sceptical but found myself looking foolish while reading it on a bus trying to keep myself from cracking up.
826 reviews2 followers
November 26, 2012
I can't recall the last time I so thoroughly enjoyed a book. This one held me in rapt attention. From the opening lines through to the final word. I've read that Farley Mowat is a 'natural story teller' and I totally agree. I burst out in laughter so many times while reading this book, and often in public places. Thankfully most everyone on the plane was sleeping while I was trying unsuccessfully to contain my chuckles.

What did I find so amusing you might ask. Well, just about everything Mr. Mowat wrote. He can manage to turn the most sorry of stories into an award winning humorous novel.

This is the tale of his little Newfoundland boat that just didn't want to float. Whether it was the wood or the design, the Happy Adventurer was continually threatening to take Farley and his sailing companions down into the deep.

During the several years of fretting and sailing this little vessel, there were many times when Farley could have called it quits, but he perservered and eventually succeeded in turning her into a sea worthy ship. This true life story shows great spirit and tenacity.

I have several more books by Mr. Mowat that I am moving to the front of my reading list. I can't imagine why I haven't read any of these works earlier.
Profile Image for Denise.
86 reviews13 followers
August 27, 2018
As I sat in the companionway of our Alacrity eyeing a leak, a fellow sailor suggested I read “The Boat Who Wouldn’t Float.” After reading the book, I feel we may have sold the Alacrity too soon. Farley proves that with some work and determination, a leaky boat is still able to provide plenty of adventure. He tells an endearing story of finding his boat, dreaming of a cross Atlantic sailing to Bermuda, and the many adventures that are realized with “Happy Adventure” at sail.

The book has amusing characters throughout. Many with the fearlessness that East Coast living brings: like the dark cliffs that stand tall through years of wind and fog and rain. Farley’s writing took me there. I could imagine searching through the fog for a safe harbour or watching an incoming tide to be sure we made our crossing in time.

Learning the geography of the area and the history of those who settled to live with the Miq’Mac Nations was a bonus, and most surprising to me, the islands of St.-Pierre and Miquelon: the last piece of French territory in North America. I’m now curious to visit these islands that are officially French and just 12 miles south of Newfoundland.
171 reviews3 followers
June 25, 2018
Funny and satisfying. Mowat chronicles his misadventures sailing around the Canadian Maritimes in the 1960s. The lack of GPS and anything more modern than a compass make his time at sea sound like the ancients'. He recounts a drive across Newfoundland destroying his car's muffler and tailpipe, blowing 7 tires, and lasting 5 days! Google Maps says it now takes 9 hours. The 50-year-old world of this book is as distant as the Vikings.

For a chapter or two Mowat anchors in Saint Pierre and Miquelon, a delightful quirk of geography, islands off the coast of Newfoundland that are French. Not just francophone; they belong to France, not Canada.

This is my second reading of the book. I read it in middle school. I so rarely re-read books because I read so so slowly and life is short. It was fun to experience the semi-familiar.
Profile Image for Jonathon.
7 reviews2 followers
August 7, 2008
What a book. My brother gave this to me a few years ago, and it blew me away. This is for the kid in all of us "grown" men that still wants to go out and see if we can turn our ideas into adventures. A highly entertaining tale.

By the way, my brothers boats all float, and they are stylish to boot.

13 reviews
February 22, 2010
One of the classic sailing novels of all time.
Anyone who's an inexperienced sailor that's spent time sailing a boat that needs a lot of repair will appreciate this book.
Farley Mowatt's sense of humor in seemingly impossible circumstances makes this book a joy to read.
Profile Image for Wendy.
286 reviews2 followers
July 25, 2025
We've probably read this book 5 times. Mowat is funny, humble and interesting. There's a reason he's a Canadian treasure whose recent passing we all mourn. The book is a Canadian classic by a much-loved author.
Profile Image for Hannah Crompton.
7 reviews
September 29, 2021
A great lighthearted and funny book about a man’s adventures around Newfoundland as he tries to make his schooner seaworthy. Definitely recommend if you are looking for a change of pace or if you have any connection to Newfoundland or eastern Canada!
Profile Image for Andrea Dame.
9 reviews
August 4, 2024
Hilarious, made my Newfoundland blood happy to have read
Profile Image for James Boyce.
113 reviews2 followers
March 7, 2022
This is a hilarious piece of Canadiana. Mowat ends up with a terrible boat and sails it all around Newfoundland, St. Pierre and Miquelon, Nova Scotia and finally up the St. Lawrence in time for Expo '67. His stories about Newfoundland ferry crossings, coffee made with rum as the water, the memorable Jack McClelland, and avoiding the RCMP boats while smuggling all made me laugh enough to make others around me uncomfortable. Now, time to head to an auction sale...
Profile Image for Cristina.
63 reviews
September 12, 2022
Loved this book. A maritime travelogue from Newfoundland to st Pierre and finally to Montreal, expo 69. This would be a great book for upper grades. Good storytelling, Impressive nautical jargon and humorous.
Profile Image for LobsterQuadrille.
1,077 reviews
April 24, 2020
I have really liked most of the Farley Mowat books I have read, both fiction and non-fiction. Sadly, I found myself a bit bored with The Boat Who Wouldn't Float. There were enough funny moments, but in between those it was often repetitious and I didn't feel invested in most of the side characters. The exception was Jack McClelland, who was certainly the most entertaining. Unfortunately, when Jack wasn't around the humor was notably less consistent. It is a decent light read and I liked the way Mowat's writing gives some personality to the titular boat, but this isn't one of Mowat's best. But boat enthusiasts will probably get a kick out of it, and they are probably more of this book's target audience anyways.
Profile Image for Marie Charron.
229 reviews
July 28, 2022
Things I liked: The rich history of Newfoundland and its people (similar enough in tone to fit the theme of “coastal Maine” I was going for this week), the light tone, the characterization of the boat herself, and the details of the many misadventures of the Happy Adventure and her crews.

Things that confused me: Who is reading this and experiencing a “belly laugh on every page?” And why did Mowat take on this misadventure at all? While the tone was light and funny, it wasn’t laugh out loud hilarious, and Mowat did sort of strike me as a rich guy who enjoyed being able to tell the story of trying to take a sinking boat on a pleasure cruise.
53 reviews1 follower
January 21, 2023
This was a fun and entertaining book to read. I had remember reading Never Cry Wolf by the author as a required text in junior high but did not recall the writing style of the author. I certainly will check out other works by Mowat. It was interesting to hear Mowat’s description of the small ports and inhabitants of the various locations along the coast of NL. Many of these communities I am familiar with from my career working in the aquaculture industry within the province a half a century after the writing of this book.
Profile Image for Marion.
1,174 reviews
December 20, 2023
A true sailing saga from the irrepressible Farley Mowat who buys a second hand leaking schooner and suffers the travails of keeping it afloat through many seasons. Takes place around the southeast coast of Newfoundland in the 1960s. Laugh out loud funny in spots.
Profile Image for Dave Courtney.
865 reviews30 followers
August 22, 2025
Loved the dry sense of humour. And by the time I got to the end I felt genuine affection for the main character, a boat named Happy Adventure

And of course love the Canadian backdrop. Taken together this is straight up comfort food
Profile Image for Ben.
969 reviews119 followers
January 18, 2020
A most enjoyable story. It aims for light humor (and not much more), and usually succeeds. The humor is never cruel, but always tolerant and humane. The people, the boat, the dog, are all wonderful characters (yes, even the boat). There is some real adventure, but Mowat's endurable cheer is relentless.

> She immediately proceeded to give evidence of what was to be her most salient characteristic. She leaked as no boat I have ever known, before or since, could leak.

> A hundred arms began to wave as hoarse voices were raised in a great shout. Jack, at the wheel of the red beast, was delighted. He thought the people were welcoming him to Muddy Hole. He also thought he was still on the ill-defined track which led down the boulder scree to the shore of the cove. He was wrong on both counts. There was no road, and the inhabitants were trying vehemently to warn him of this fact. "My son!" one of the observers of the scene told me afterwards. "It were a wunnerful sight to see!" And here I had better explain that in Newfoundland the word "wonderful" still means what it used to mean in older times: full of wonder, full of awe. The car negotiated the first few yards without incident, then the slope abruptly steepened and although Jack, suspecting by now that all was not well, tramped on the brakes, it was too late. Down came the red behemoth, careless of the boulders in its path and heedless of a number of split-stick fences, leaping and bounding with the abandon of a hippopotamus driven mad by hashish

> There was no clutch and no gear box. When, and if, the engine started, the boat immediately began to move. She did not necessarily move forward. It is an idiosyncrasy of the make-and-breaks that when they start they may choose to turn over either to left or to right (which is to say either forward or astern), and there is no way known to man of predicting which direction it is going to be.

> It was Jack who saved us all. He did not even pause to curse, but leapt into the engine room with such alacrity that he caught the bullgine sleeping. Before it knew he was there he had spun the flywheel and, even without a prime, the green beast was so surprised she fired. She had been taken totally off guard, but even as she belched into life she struck back at us, thinking to make us pay for our trickery by starting in reverse. There were a great many people watching from the fish-plant wharf. Since they could not hear the roar of the bullgine above the thunder of the plant machinery they were incredulous of what they saw. Under full sail and snoring bravely along, Happy Adventure slowly came to a stop. Then with all sails still set and drawing—she began to back up. The fish-plant manager, a worldly man who had several times seen motion picture films, said it was like watching a movie that had been reversed. He said he expected to see the schooner back right up Obie's stage, lower her sails, and go to sleep again.

> The engine roared and the heat became so intense that we were sweating almost as much water back into the bilges as we were pumping out. We pumped.

> Trepassey is, as they say in other parts of Newfoundland, "t'place where t'fog is made." I believe it. Happy Adventure lay in Trepassey for almost a week, and during that time we never knew if the sun still shone somewhere, or if it had been extinguished by some cosmic cataclysm.

> "They're a nasty bunch over there. They won't hardly part with a drop of gasoline on tick. Won't give a feller no credit at all. I told 'em last time I filled up there I’d pay 'em when I got the money, and one of these years I may."

> The bullgine had learned how to heat herself up until she got so hot that when we tried to stop her we could not do it. Disconnecting the battery did no good because the igniter, having become incandescent, would continue to fire the gasoline charges anyway. The only way we could stop her was to turn off the gasoline tap at the main tank, and it then took up to five minutes for her to consume the gasoline remaining in her huge carburetor before she would finally give up the ghost. She revealed this distressing new trait the day before the Jeannie Barnes arrived, when we made a voyage across the harbour to the wharf of a small merchant who sold fuel, food, and sundries to fishermen. His dock was crowded with small boats and so, for safety's sake, I ordered Jack to stop the engine while we were still some distance, off. The engine refused to stop and we ploughed ahead at full speed. I managed to heel her over in a sharp turn, doing no more damage to the moored boats than to skin the paint off a trap skiff. Shaken to the quick, I headed the vessel back toward the cen tre of the harbour—whereupon the engine stopped. Naturally it would not start again.

> While stationed in Holland after the end of the Second World War Mike Donovan stole a German v-2 rocket. After painting it blue, building a wooden conning tower on it, and brazenly calling it a one-man submarine, he shipped it back to Canada as a glorious souvenir.

> We had given up our original intention of sailing to the tropics because it was clear from a scrutiny of our log that, even if we maintained our current rate of progress, it would take us sixteen months to reach the Caribbean; twenty-nine months to reach the Azores; and seven and a half years to reach the South Pacific.

> Happy Adventure puttered blindly on into the dark and brooding murk and I was soon fog-chilled, unutterably lonely, and scared to death. Since rum is a known and accepted antidote for all three conditions I took a long, curative drink for each separate ailment

> "Where you bound, Skipper?" someone called across to us. "St. Pierre," I cried back. "Heading to clear Cape St. Mary’s with a five-mile offing." There was a long thoughtful silence from our neighbour. And then: "Well, byes, I don't see how you’re going to do it steering the course you is. Unless, that is, you plans to take her up the Branch River, carry her over the Platform Hills, and put her on a railroad train. If I was you, I'd haul off to port about nine points. Good luck to ye!"

> The thought occurred to me that if we had to find ourselves in a situation of some jeopardy, we were better off aboard Happy Adventure than aboard a well-found, comfortable, and properly equipped yacht. "You have to be kidding!" Jack said when I propounded this idea. "Not at all. Look at it this way. If we were in a hundred-thousand-dollar yacht we’d have to worry like hell about the prospect of losing her. We don't have that worry aboard Happy Adventure."

> They were very good about some other small matters to which I had forgotten to attend before we left Muddy Hole. For one thing, I had not obtained official clearance for my vessel to sail to foreign ports. Also, I had not bothered to have her registered and so I had no papers. No papers. No flag. No port of registration, and not even a name painted on her stern or bow. It was a wonder that Mike and I were not immediately jailed and our ship interned.

> "If one o' they cutters comes onto we, we heaves bags and boxes over side. The salt, bein' heavy, takes the boxes straight down below, and there they stays 'till the salt melts into the water. How long that'll take depends on how much salt you uses and what kind o' bag. A brin bag'll soak out fifty pounds o' salt in fifteen hours; but fifty pounds in a flour sack'll take nigh onto twenty-four hours."

> The cargo that was lovingly unloaded from the skiffs was the real stuff; whereas the cargo we had carried from St. Pierre consisted of fourteen wooden cases—filled with rocks—ballasted with fourteen salt bags—filled with sand. Our role, as determined for us by the Hondas brothers, had been that of a stalking horse charged with deflecting and preoccupying the hounds of the law

> They had her hauled on the slip, nominally for repairs, but when they discovered she only needed cleaning out and the replacement of one plank in her counter, they arranged to increase the repair costs by the simple expedient of tearing off six feet of her stern with crowbars.

> What, two months earlier, had appeared to be the prospect of a pleasant voyage to Expo now loomed as an ordeal from which it seemed unlikely that any of us would emerge unscathed. My one remaining hope was that the weather, which had been atrocious since late May, would stay that way until October, giving me at least a semi-legitimate excuse for remaining snugly moored in Messers Cove until the whole idiotic scheme had been forgotten. The weather on the Sou'west Coast being what it was, I felt reasonably safe in publicly announcing that we would sail on the first fair-weather day. Wednesday, August second, dawned fair. … The inexplicable facts are these: when I woke at nine o'clock it was to find a clear, cloudless day, not a breath of wind, perfect visibility, and a sea as calm as an average lily pond. And Happy Adventure was not leaking. At first I did not believe any of it, but when conditions had not changed by noon I had to accept the unpalatable conclusion that there was nothing, short of my sabotaging the boat or engine, that was going to enable me to abandon the voyage.

> "She sucked the mud right into her," Ralph explained. "Filled her pores right up with mud. Now she can't leak no matter how she tries…not until the mud washes out of her, that is. And when it does, well, you better find yourself another mud bank, quick."

> "Put back? God almighty, that's all you ever do! If you had the guts of a canary you'd hold your course. Afraid to die, are you? Bloody coward!" I was very much afraid to die, but I was also afraid of having to live with Jack in future years unless I took his dare.

> Once beyond Cap Gaspé, and properly into the estuary of the mighty St. Lawrence River, our progress slowed from a healthy snail's pace, to that of a badly crippled one.

> "Christ Almighty," he burst out. "We could swim to Montreal faster than this!" He was overstating the case a little, but was not far enough off the mark that I cared to argue with him. I kept my peace because, although he was not yet aware of it, we were changing our position in regard to Fame Point. We were getting farther and farther away from it!

> It was perhaps underhanded of me, but I arranged with the man who told me the story to come aboard Happy Adventure one night, and tell it again. When he was through I asked him what would happen to the forlorn little vessel. "The government, they take her for wharfage fees," he said, and, brutally, "they sell her cheap to some fellow in the town. This winter he will haul her out and cut her up for firewood. Good riddance, too." That night Happy Adventure did not leak a drop. When we departed for Quebec on September first, she behaved so well that we ran on by day and by night.

> Somehow Glen had switched his attention from the light on Goose Cape to the bright masthead light of a big ship heading east down the southern channel. Happy Adventure was making about seven knots over the bottom, on a falling tide, and heading resolutely for salt water and for home.

> "Well, dear, it's all over now. Want some coffee? I'll put the kettle on." I swung my legs out of my bunk…and stepped into twelve inches of cold water. She had done it again.
Profile Image for Michael.
219 reviews
January 2, 2023
This was one of my dad's favorite books which I inherited amongst a trunk of other of his favorites. This true story is so funny and well written that I made myself only read about a chapter a week to drag out the good feeling.
251 reviews3 followers
October 20, 2017
The local Newfoundland color in this book is simply delicious, and many of the anecdotes it contains are quite humorous. However, I felt that Mowat's use of a fatuous, James Thurber-esque writing style was somewhat incongruous with the subject matter. If this book is factual, then Mowat came very close to dying on a whole number of occasions; by adopting a lighthearted, humorous approach even while describing the danger, Mowat removes the sense of realism that his otherwise exemplary study of the Newfoundlander outports creates.

In the end, I am forced to compare this book unfavorably to Jerome K Jerome's Three Men in a Boat, which seems an obvious literary antecedent. There, a light-hearted tone makes sense, for the exploits are clearly fictitious, and the dangers encountered on the river exist only in the imaginations of the foolish characters. Mowat's fictionalized version of himself is tilting at genuine giants, not windmills, and deserves prose to match.

Nonetheless, the portrait of a dying Newfoundland (one that is now entirely lost) is so remarkably deep and poignant that I would have given this book four stars but for the ending. Once the Happy Adventure leaves the Newfoundland coast, Mowat seemed to tire of his subject matter, and the book is forced to a quick conclusion without the rich anecdotal tangents that colored the first four-fifths of the narrative.
Profile Image for Mary.
366 reviews6 followers
April 17, 2022
Why haven't I read anything by this author before? He is amazing and reminds me a lot of Bill Bryson. Reading Mowat is like joining him for a cup of coffee, laughing so hard that you're brought to tears and feeling comfortable in his presence. After reading this awesome book I hit up Google and found out that he's quite the prolific writer and environmentalist! The reader gets the sense that this is the kind of friend that they'd like to have to bring a bit of humility to situations that are so bad that all one can do is laugh and move on.

In this book, he and his buddy decide to purchase a boat to escape and travel the Seven Seas. They scraped together $1000 and found a boat within their budget. There was a reason why the HAPPY ADVENTURES only cost $1000 -- she leaked (a lot) and had a certain mind of her own. Nevertheless, Mowat had faith in her and went to sea. Along the way he met folks that helped him with her, by constantly repairing her and making memories.

Not being a seasoned sailor, his preparation for a voyage like this was rather slim - no charts, a misleading compass, but plenty of rum. They continuously pumped water out of her hold, tried to figure out where the leak was, patched her until another leak sprang up, repeat It was a hilarious story of men too determined to let this small annoyance dampen their dreams and too stubborn to give her up.
Profile Image for Gail Amendt.
792 reviews30 followers
July 21, 2018
Farley Mowat was an amazing storyteller, and when he wanted to be funny, he was very, very funny, so I knew this book would be a fun read. In the late 1950's, Farley and his friend and publisher, Jack, bought a boat in Newfoundland, with the intention of having many adventures sailing around the world. What they got instead was a long series of misadventures, as the boat was really not seaworthy, and spent more time being repaired than sailing. Most of these misadventures occurred in and around the many tiny, dying outport communities of southern Newfoundland and in the nearby French islands of St. Pierre and Miquelon, and involved copious quantities of liquor and wonderfully eccentric local characters. The real beauty of this book is the look it gives us at the locals and their way of life. Along the way, Farley met and married his wife Claire, and I so wish he had elaborated on this. As much of their early courtship seemed to involve the wretched boat, it's a wonder she stuck around. Most of this book was laugh-out-loud funny, but it seemed to fizzle at the end. It's not like Farley Mowat to rush an ending, but he did this time.
Profile Image for Donna.
271 reviews3 followers
July 14, 2018
Another great bedtime book from Margaret's book sale.

I read this story of Farley Mowat's boat many years ago. It was definitely worth reading again. This true tale of his and friends' attempts to get the boat resurrected and afloat is hilarious. It's just good, clean fun....okay it's quite cheeky in a! lot of places.
Aside from the story of the getting the boat out, the characters that you meet in the telling are so funny!

All in all, this is a great book. It's not a long read and I had to pace myself so that I wouldn't finish it too quickly. This would also be a good book to take to the cottage or the beach or the back yard.
583 reviews10 followers
April 14, 2018
This memoir probably belongs in a category called semi-fiction or something like that, given Moeat's reputation for looseneds with the facts. It is a (mostly) humorous tale of Mowat's years in southeast Newfoundland in the 1960s, and his frustrations with a small schooner was less than seaeorthy most of the time. The humor probably does not work for all, but it works better for me than that of Bill Bryson, Mowat being a little mre upbeat.
74 reviews
September 27, 2025
Farley Mowat has long been one of my favorite authors. I found this book interesting because of the geographical area which I have no personal knowledge of. The people of the water are my super heroes because I would not be as brave as they are.
14 reviews
August 23, 2012
The scariest fun read! This book will make you feel better about your wooden boat (hopefully)!
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