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Nancy taylor Robson

Course of the Waterman

 
 
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Seventeen-year-old Bailey Kraft assumes he will become a waterman like his father and generations of men before him. It is a life bred in the bone. But it is also a dying livelihood. Fish stocks are plummeting and with them, the harvests. Watermen are unable to earn a living. Yet Bailey is a Kraft – river royalty. He has a sense of purpose and belonging until the day his father shatters his lifelong plans. Suddenly, he must fight the people he loves most to hang onto his birthright. Set on Chesapeake Bay's Eastern Shore, this award-winning novel is the story of Bailey Kraft, his tough and determined little sister, Hannah, his best friend, Booty, and Booty's alcoholic father, Tud. Bailey faces fear, loss and wrenching changes. Yet amidst it all, he glimpses the unexpected possibilities that life can offer.


Paperback and E-book. Amazon site for Course of the Waterman

 
 

Reviews

I read this book in one night on a Sunday. By Monday and by plan, I was sitting on the front porch of a little cottage on Church Creek - yes, there really IS a Church Creek! The following morning, very early, there was a trot-liner setting his "lie" right in front of me. It really brought back great memories of working with an old waterman back in the 50's when I was a kid. We worked the same "lie", which was later worked by Booty E. Yes, there really WAS a Booty!

Reading this book brought it all back. I know these waters, I know this way of life. The author has done a superb job of depicting a way of life that is almost vanished, but not quite yet.

The Elizabeth River is the Chester River, Adams College is Washington College. Some names were not changed. Cacaway Island, Spaniards Point, Lawyer's Cove - these are all real places under their real names and I have been there by boat.

The author got it right!

Her story, beside being a nostalgic trip down memory lane for me, was a superb tale of a snarky adolescent. I could have cheerfully hit both Bailey and Booty with a wooden boat bailer. After the tragedy - no spoilers here - Bailey begins to grow up. He learns to appreciate his little sister, he accepts his fate of having to go to college, and becomes civil if not companionable to Tud. Perhaps in time he will become a decent human being. I may see him on an environmental cruise with school kids learning about the Bay: he may some day be the Director of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation. There are several Baileys I know who made the transition from waterman to advocate and educator for the Bay's environment. Bless them all.

—@crabbinharper, Amazon

Lest you lose interest in this review before I get to the point, I'll make it now: get a copy of this book and read it. It won't take you long. You can finish the book in one evening and then, I'll bet you anything, it will stand out in your memory as one of the most impressive reading experiences you've ever had, sticking with you as only the rarest of good books or stories can do.

With that out of the way, on to the book itself. The Course of the Waterman, Nancy Taylor Robson's debut novel, tells the story of seventeen-year-old Bailey Kraft, whose family has been fishing the Elizabeth River on Maryland's Eastern Shore for generations. Like the Kraft men before him, Bailey has river water in his veins, and a peculiar talent for finding fish: the Krafts are river royalty. But every year the haul is less impressive, and supporting a family by fishing is becoming increasingly difficult. Early in the book Bailey's father Orrin announces that he wants his son to go to college, to have options that he didn't have. This change in plan is wholly unwelcome: Bailey had expected to fish full-time after finishing high school; he would have quit school to do so had he been allowed. But responding to his father's bombshell is only the first of a great many challenges Bailey must meet in the course of the story--hard work in difficult, sometimes life threatening circumstances not least among them.

Bailey is surrounded by a handful of characters who are as vividly imagined as he is: his parents and younger sister and the Warrens, Tud and his son Booty, the latter more brother to Bailey than friend. Robson, indeed, has fleshed out her characters and explored their interlocking relationships--all of which are changed during the course of this story--more fully than most authors can in twice as many pages. Robson's book explores the obligations of friendship and the bonds, stronger than rivalries and animosities, that hold together a community of people who need one another to survive--"the pull and haul of relationship, gift, and obligation."

Like her characters, Robson grew up on the Chesapeake, and she worked for years as a deckhand on a coastal tug. (She tells her story in Woman in the Wheelhouse.) She couldn't have written this book the way she did without that experience. Readers like myself who aren't familiar with the life she describes--most of us, surely--will encounter some unfamiliar vocabulary here, but context is sufficient to get the meaning across. The first paragraph immerses the reader at once in the life of a Chesapeake waterman:

"The trotline groaned over the roller as it came up out of the blue-black Elizabeth River on Maryland's Eastern Shore. Braced against the boat's wooden coaming, seventeen-year-old Bailey Kraft was poised, dip net ready, scanning for the bait twisted every eight feet or so into the mile-long line. That was where the crab would be--if there were a crab. As he watched, a shadow rose from the dark water and came into focus, sharpening into olive shell and blue-green claws that clung to a frayed gray eel chunk tied to the line. When the crab broke the surface, Bailey leaned out, scooped it up, and dumped it into the bushel basket at his feet."

I can pick nits--precisely two. Robson tells her story in the third-person, primarily from the perspective of Bailey himself. On a few occasions the perspective changes to that of another character, and when it does, because it is so infrequent, I found it jarring. Second, the issue of race relations is introduced very briefly at the very end of the book. I found this jarring as well simply because, while it fits the storyline at the end, it has no bearing at all on what comes before and thus seems out of place.

These are minor complaints. The Course of the Waterman is a must read, for adults and young adults alike. It succeeds in being both a thoughtful, moving character study and a gripping adventure story.

—Debra Hamel -- author of Trying Neaira: The True Story of a Courtesan's Scandalous Life in Ancient Greece (Yale University Press, 2003)

 
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About the Author

Nancy Taylor Robson Nancy Taylor Robson was one of the first women to earn a US Coast Guard license as a commercial mariner. She grew up sailing and building boats with her father,and worked as a housepainter, desk clerk, and yacht maintenance person while incollege. After earning a degree in history, she married and went to work alongsideher husband as cook/deckhand aboard an old 85-foot coastal tugboat built during World War II. 

Robson brings that world alive and takes you along for every hard won but glorious nautical mile. This book is for anyone who every imagined running away to sea, for every woman who wonders what it would be like to live a real-life adventure romance, for every man who relishes the outdoors, and for everyone who loves a good yarn. Robson was one of a handful of women who cracked open the gates at a bastion of male supremacy for every intrepid woman who has followed.


Author of numerous articles and essays, Nancy Taylor Robsonis also the author of two novels: Course of the Waterman, and A Love Like No Other: Abigail and John Adams, A Modern Love Story.