‘Confirms Harris’s undisputed place as our leading master of both the historical and contemporary thriller’ Daily Mail
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LAWS ARE SILENT IN TIMES OF WAR.
THE WILLIAM HILL SPORTS BOOK OF THE YEAR 2016 and WINNER OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR BIOGRAPHY 2016
Surfing only looks like a sport. To devotees, it is something else entirely: a beautiful addiction, a mental and physical study, a passionate way of life.
William Finnegan first started surfing as a young boy in California and Hawaii.
BARBARIAN DAYS is his immersive memoir of a life spent travelling the world chasing waves through the South Pacific, Australia, Asia, Africa, Peru and beyond. Finnegan describes the edgy yet enduring brotherhood forged among the swell of the surf; and recalling his own apprenticeship to the world's most famous and challenging waves, he considers the intense relationship formed between man, board and water.
BARBARIAN DAYS is an old-school adventure story, a social history, an extraordinary exploration of one man's gradual mastering of an exacting and little-understood art. It is a memoir of dangerous obsession and enchantment.
Details
ISBN13: 9781472151414
Format: Paperback / softback
Number of Pages: 512
Edition:
Publication Date: 10 May 2016
Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group
Publication City, Country: London, United Kingdom
Dimensions (cm): 195(H)x130(L)x34(W)406
Weight (gm): 406
Author Biography
WILLIAM FINNEGAN is the author of
Cold New World,
A Complicated War,
Dateline Soweto, and
Crossing the Line. He has twice been a National Magazine Award finalist and has won numerous journalism awards, including two Overseas Press Club awards since 2009. A staff writer at
The New Yorker since 1987, he lives in Manhattan.
Reviews
For pure sensation, pick up
New Yorker writer William Finnegan's memories of the beach,
Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life. Just try and keep the sand out of your book ...and out of your sandwich. - Publishers Weekly, Best Summer Books 2015
Surfing is Topic A here, but it inevitably connects with politics (when Mr. Finnegan taught in Cape Town, South Africa, in 1981, students boycotted his classes to protest apartheid), environmental issues (he sees great surf spots both created and destroyed by human enterprise) and much more. - New York Times, Cool Beach Books for Hot Summer Days
There are too many breathtaking, original things in
Barbarian Days to do more than mention here - observations about surfing that have simply never been made before, or certainly never so well.
But a particularly remarkable feature of
Barbarian Days is the generous yet unsparing portraits of competitive surf friendships that make up a major share of the narrative. - New York Times
Nothing I've read so accurately describes the feeling of being stoked or the despair of being held under. But also because while it is a book about "A Surfing Life" - as the subtitle states - it's also about a writer's life and, even more generally, a quester's life, more carefully observed and precisely rendered than any I've read in a long time. - LA Times
A surfer's tale of his quest for self-transcendence is a masterpiece that recalls early James Salter - Geoff Dyer, the Observer
I don't know anything about surfing, but I was gripped by the intensity of his language, never mind the thrilling recklessness of his behaviour in the waves - Olivia Laing, Guardian Best Holiday Reads 2015
Luscious - Ed Caesar, Guardian