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Rating: Summary: Discover the white marlin - no fishing interest required Review: A delightfully narrated story by a South American born raconteur who is also an award winning restaurateur in Washington DC. Carlos takes you on a page turning journey through his thoughts and inspiration deep sea-fishing off the eastern Atlantic shores. The highlight is his participation and triumph in the annual white marlin fishing tournament in Ocean City, Maryland. Carlos is a gentle spirit with herculean courage. After reading this, I feel I have to go meet him as well as his new restaurant, the Fathom Grille in Ocean City. This is a very quick and uplifting read. It reminds one we are only limited by our perception of what is possible.
Rating: Summary: Discover the white marlin - no fishing interest required Review: A delightfully narrated story by a South American born raconteur who is also an award winning restaurateur in Washington DC. Carlos takes you on a page turning journey through his thoughts and inspiration deep sea-fishing off the eastern Atlantic shores. The highlight is his participation and triumph in the annual white marlin fishing tournament in Ocean City, Maryland. Carlos is a gentle spirit with herculean courage. After reading this, I feel I have to go meet him as well as his new restaurant, the Fathom Grille in Ocean City. This is a very quick and uplifting read. It reminds one we are only limited by our perception of what is possible.
Rating: Summary: "....a tour de force and a page turner........." Review: Before "A crew of one," there was one great book about fishing, and it was by Ernest Hemingway. Now, there are two. Carlos Bentos has the gift that all great, instinctive writers possess: He can make a complicated, emotional subject into a matter that is easily understood, even by a landlubber like me. Bentos is clearly not the adversary of the pelagic billfish he seeks to conquer; rather, he admires and respects them, which is why he returns them to their own world. Would that all fishermen could be as kindly toward the creatures of the sea. Bentos shows that the struggle between man and marlin is intellectual, physical, emotional and even a bit spiritual. "A Crew of One" is a tour de force and a page turner...a rare combination outside the world of the techno-thriller or mega-marketed mystery story. We all await Carlos' next venture in literature!
Rating: Summary: "....a tour de force and a page turner........." Review: Before "A crew of one," there was one great book about fishing, and it was by Ernest Hemingway. Now, there are two. Carlos Bentos has the gift that all great, instinctive writers possess: He can make a complicated, emotional subject into a matter that is easily understood, even by a landlubber like me. Bentos is clearly not the adversary of the pelagic billfish he seeks to conquer; rather, he admires and respects them, which is why he returns them to their own world. Would that all fishermen could be as kindly toward the creatures of the sea. Bentos shows that the struggle between man and marlin is intellectual, physical, emotional and even a bit spiritual. "A Crew of One" is a tour de force and a page turner...a rare combination outside the world of the techno-thriller or mega-marketed mystery story. We all await Carlos' next venture in literature!
Rating: Summary: You don't have to like fishing to enjoy "A Crew of One"., Review: I am not a fisherman or fisherwoman as this case may be, however, I found "A Crew of One" extremely interesting. It was a quick read book filled with not only the adventures of the author but insight into his fascinating life, from his homeland of Uraguay to Maryland where he presently resides. His philosophy of life, which he reflects upon during his many hours alone at sea, shows the reader how truly genuine and sincere Mr. Bentos must really be. By the way, I am an 80 year old woman who has never even been fishing.
Rating: Summary: You don't have to like fishing to enjoy "A Crew of One"., Review: I am not a fisherman or fisherwoman as this case may be, however, I found "A Crew of One" extremely interesting. It was a quick read book filled with not only the adventures of the author but insight into his fascinating life, from his homeland of Uraguay to Maryland where he presently resides. His philosophy of life, which he reflects upon during his many hours alone at sea, shows the reader how truly genuine and sincere Mr. Bentos must really be. By the way, I am an 80 year old woman who has never even been fishing.
Rating: Summary: What an amazing fisherman Review: Let me start out saying this is an outstanding book it is 200 pages on marlin fishing as the title says. The author Carlos Bentos who was originally a resident of uruguay and came to U.S. byway of being a broadcaster for voice of america until he decided to take a chance and opened a resturant and eventually led to an additional 4 more successful resturants all around the washington dc area. A trip to north carolina for trip on a charter boat for marlin led to his desire for the marlin and desire for his own boat.
The author lives in annapolis and ocean city maryland. Ocean city being the area where is boat is docked and where he mostly fish's out of. In a sport fishermans arena dealing with the bill fish which has boats that cost anywhere from 1/2 a million to at least 3 million dollars and crews that can make anywhere from 60,000 to 100,000 or more annual salary he is the only one on his boat except maybe an occasional tournament judge the author is the owner,captain,the mate,and the fisherman. While he fishes for the fun and in tournaments for many different types of bill fish it seems that he mostly is catching white marlin this along the atlantic coast. It descripes how they do catch and release and taggging of the marlins and how this provides migration information.
There is a great chapter in the book were mr. bentos tells how when he was a small boy in his native country while at a family gathering it was his mother who instilled the deep desire and love for fishing.
It is pretty amazing the tournament money that is awarded to the different catergories. The idea a single man doing all the operations on the boat is truly not the norm but it works for the author has won more than 30 competitions including the annual ocean city white marlin tournament which about a 1/4 of the book is dedicated his participation in the tournament of 1996.
If you like this type of book i would recommend "The Hungry Ocean" by Linda Greenlaw and The Perfect Storm by Sebastin Junger
alll though Mr.Bentos does not think to highly of these books or the boat captains of the fishing boats feeling that even though they may have a love for the sea the way they fish using longlines with upto 4,000 hooks is not very skillful nor very glamourous and that they are just building a bank account.
Once again this is an excellent book!
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