
Nelson Haydamacker
Author of Deckhand: Life on Freighters of the Great Lakes
Works by Nelson Haydamacker
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Reviews
This is a short (100+ pages) "as-told-to", with Haydamacker the storyteller and Millar the transcriber/editor. Both did excellent jobs, and produced an interesting book about the day-to-day life of deckhands on Great Lakes freighters in the early 1960s.
Mickey Haydamacher was just out of high school and looking for a job. He grew up near (and on) the St. Clair River and had family members who crewed on lakers, so he applied for a job with the Interlake Steamship Company. This book is his show more retelling of his two years as a deckhand on Interlake ships.
The book's subtitle, "Life on Freighters of the Great Lakes," is a good description of its contents. This is a book about everyday life--fighting to open and close hatches, washing things down, surviving the weather, sharing a smoke, visiting waterfront bars. It's also about friendships, growing up a bit, and getting on with life.
The author served on (then-)new boats--the Eldon Hoyt 2nd and J.L. Mauthe--and a "bucket of bolts"--Col. James Pickands--so he can make some valuable best-and-worst comparisons. He visited most of the upper lakes ports, and tells tales about a few of those. But mostly it's a book about his ships, his shipmates, and the things he did every day on the ships.
It's a different perspective than offered by most who write about lakes shipping. It's well done, and worth your time.
This review has also been published on a dabbler's journal. show less
Mickey Haydamacher was just out of high school and looking for a job. He grew up near (and on) the St. Clair River and had family members who crewed on lakers, so he applied for a job with the Interlake Steamship Company. This book is his show more retelling of his two years as a deckhand on Interlake ships.
The book's subtitle, "Life on Freighters of the Great Lakes," is a good description of its contents. This is a book about everyday life--fighting to open and close hatches, washing things down, surviving the weather, sharing a smoke, visiting waterfront bars. It's also about friendships, growing up a bit, and getting on with life.
The author served on (then-)new boats--the Eldon Hoyt 2nd and J.L. Mauthe--and a "bucket of bolts"--Col. James Pickands--so he can make some valuable best-and-worst comparisons. He visited most of the upper lakes ports, and tells tales about a few of those. But mostly it's a book about his ships, his shipmates, and the things he did every day on the ships.
It's a different perspective than offered by most who write about lakes shipping. It's well done, and worth your time.
This review has also been published on a dabbler's journal. show less
Statistics
- Works
- 1
- Members
- 17
- Popularity
- #654,390
- Rating
- 2.8
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 2
