Folklore and the Sea

by Horace Beck

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Horace Beck, a former professor of American Literature at Middlebury College, has been gathering the sea's folklore for 70 years in Europe, North America, and the West Indies. This collection of legends, songs, superstitions, and stories, both true and apocryphal includes spectral ships, mermaids and mermen, pirates, sea language, sea monsters, navigation and weather lore, names on sea and shore, and much more. Library Journal called Folklore and the Sea "a browser's delight as well as a show more researcher's gold mine." show less

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1 review
The breadth of the subject matter is impressive, and this book is probably a "must have" for those interested in nautical folklore and mythology. The drawback, unfortunately, is that many of the yarns that Beck relates from his encounters with old salts of Scotland, the West Indies, and elsewhere, simply don't deliver the goods. Too many are either anti-climatic or borderline incoherent. Beck himself alluded to this in the epilogue, noting that some yarns are better heard and witnessed in person as much of the flavor of the story comes from the delivery and body language of the storyteller him/herself. When put into print, much of the impact is diminished especially if the story wasn't that compelling to begin with. I'm probably being show more too harsh with my 2.5 rating, but yet I can't go higher than a 3 for this reason. That said, I'm glad I have this title on my shelf.

One other note: the reprinted version from the 1990s in paperback has an awful, generic cover but it does include an updated foreword from Beck with many profound insights that is worth reading, though undoubtedly some will find his opinions sexist or "behind the time."
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½

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1973
People/Characters
James Buchan, Captain; The Flying Dutchman; John Paul Jones; John Josselyn; William Kidd; Bob Roberts, Captain (show all 7); John Smith
Dedication
To Tommy and Rowan -- the young shipmates
First words
INTRODUCTION
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For folklore to survive and flourish it requires a very special climate.
Chapter I
SHIPBUILDING
I wish to have no connection with any ship that
does not sail fast for I intend to go in harm's way.
       -- John Paul Jones
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With... (show all) a little luck almost anything will float and even make considerable passages at sea.

Classifications

Genre
Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
398.2Society, government, & cultureCustoms, etiquette & folkloreFolklore & FolktalesFolk literature
LCC
GR910 .B37Geography, Anthropology and RecreationFolkloreFolkloreBy subjectOccupations
BISAC

Statistics

Members
159
Popularity
205,399
Reviews
1
Rating
½ (3.45)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
6
ASINs
1