Drew, a frequent contributor to Practical Sailor and to this blog, has branched out - he is now a published author! Aside from making a few bucks to cover his time and effort in producing these books, Drew is paying it forward; he is giving new and less-experienced sailors the benefit of his extensive experience.
Drew, as an engineer (disclaimer: as am I), has a precise, unambiguous writing style. But he will also wax poetic, in the fashion of a man who has carefully examined his own motivations.
What is rare in the sailing genre is that Drew, again being an engineer, does not shy away from experimentation. He does not accept "everyone knows" without actually testing it himself, rigorously. What Drew reports is derived from first person experience and experimentation. If he says it, he's tested it, and you can believe it.
So far, there are four books in the bookstore:
- Keeping a Cruising Boat on PeanutsPDF, Pending 2017 Kindle, about 400 pages
- Rigging Modern AnchorsPending 2017, TBD, about 250 pages.
- Singlehanded Sailing for the Coastal SailorKindle, 143 pages, PDF, 154 pages
- Faster Cruising for the Coast Sailor
PDF, 183 pages, Pending 2017, Kindle, about 200 pages
To provide a little view into what's included, here is the Table of Contents from Singlehanded Sailing for the Coastal Sailor:
- Acknowledgments 4
- Preface 7
- Part 1: The Singlehander
- Chapter 1: The Reasons We Go Alone 11
- Chapter 2: The Costal Philosophy 14
- Part II: Preparations
- Chapter 3: Docks 21
- Chapter 4: Sailing 24
- Chapter 5: Safety 41
- Part III: Practices
- Chapter 6: Sailing 63
- Chapter 7: Safety 74
- Chapter 8: Living 80
- Chapter 9: Kids 85
- Chapter 10: Summer 87
- Chapter 11: Winter 88
- Summary 100
- Glossary 102
- Appendix I: Annual Inspection 103
- Appendix II: Tethers and Jacklines 108
- Appendix III: Rainwater and Water Filtration 122
- Appendix IV: Climbing the Mast, Ladders, and Falling 136
- Appendix V: Extension Ladders and Webbing Ladders 141
- Appendix VI: Stropes 148
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