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Wanderer

Wanderer

List Price: $17.95
Your Price: $12.21
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: wanderers
Review: "Wanderer" is not just one man's tale. A schooner bum from Maine, initially wooed and later repulsed by the glamour of celebrity, caused to reevaluate his own ethics. It is a tragic and nostalgic glimpse into the human side of the land of the Titans. We visit both the hidden decadence of Hollywood that turns people into playthings and the personal desperation that drives Hayden to kidnap his own children for a two year trip through the South Pacific.

We are also, as sailors, given a sea-level view of those we have only come to know by name and legend: Irving Johnson, Spike Africa, Warwick Tompkins' Wanderbird, and Sausalito's NoNameBar. More than anything, Hayden reaffirms that, like ourselves, they were but men: simple, flawed, and determined.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "Wanderer"'s luminous insight and top notch, muscular prose
Review: Despite being marketed as a maritime book, "Wanderer" is as much a description of one man's inner wanderings as it is a travelogue of Hayden's travel to Tahiti.Throughout, Hayden comes off as a resolute man of principle and insight.I have read the book three times and always glean something new from it. Highly recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "Wanderer"'s luminous insight and top notch, muscular prose
Review: Despite being marketed as a maritime book, "Wanderer" is as much a description of one man's inner wanderings as it is a travelogue of Hayden's travel to Tahiti.Throughout, Hayden comes off as a resolute man of principle and insight.I have read the book three times and always glean something new from it. Highly recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Yep, Spike Africa is my grandfather
Review: Each page of this book is a piece of my family history. Spike was my grandfather. If you like a good sea tale, this is the book fo ryou.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Yep, Spike Africa is my grandfather
Review: Each page of this book is a piece of my family history. Spike was my grandfather. If you like a good sea tale, this is the book fo ryou.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sailing adventure with a true Skipper
Review: Great true story of a big schooner's voyage from SanFrancisco-Tahiti, leaving the pressures of big city behind and revealing the essence of a by-gone life at sea under sail. Hayden was a master mariner, and this is a must-read for any sailor or captain.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Wanderer - Wandering through life, not just the sea.
Review: Hayden's lifestyle is summed up in the title of his book. I enjoyed reading about his romantic adventures with the sea, but serious character flaws were revealed in his dealings with life in general. His statements about "no man is worth $150K/yr." and, "I don't invest my money because I don't believe in unearned income" are all too revealing about his communist/socialist bent and general ignorance about free market economics. Of course, he didn't turn down the huge salaries offered when he was in the movie business. Hollywood economic theories aside, his disdain for work-a-day mankind (cannibals?) and trivialization of the idea of financial security shows him to be living "on the edge" and, some might say, a "loose cannon". If one can overlook this nonsense, the book is fun reading and I recommend it highly to those who enjoy the sea.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Embarrassingly Good
Review: I bought my copy of "The Wanderer" when it was first published in 1964, because Sterling Hayden was one of my favorite actors. I especially enjoyed his work in The Asphalt Jungle, Johnny Guitar, The Killing, Suddenly, and Terror in a Texas Town, among others. Now, 40 years later I have decided to reread the book, and I forgot how good it was. The central theme of the book is Hayden's escape from Hollywood, with his young children in tow, on the schooner for which the book is named. He made this voyage to the south seas against orders of the court, who considered it too dangerous for the children. As he tells of this less than idyllic voyage, he intersperses fragments of his life, concentrating mostly on his late teens and twenties when he was a working seaman. He is very stylistic in his writing, and sometimes his switching from first to third person narrative is quite jarring, but the effect is emotionally charging. As he ages into his thirties and beyond, Sterling finds his life falling apart. He becomes a Hollywood heart throb and detests his work and lifestyle. He becomes a Communist for a few months, but never really gets with the program, and to save his hated career, he goes before the HUAC and bares his soul and names names, an action he quickly and forever regretted. He seesaws between impotency and affairs, he can't communicate with the women he loves, he struggles with no notable success with psychotherapy, he finds his life adrift with no anchor in sight. All of these travails he lays out with such frankness, I felt embarassed for him. Hayden holds nothing back as he displays his warts and finds no joy in his life, except with his children. Does he simply settle, or does he come to some kind of compromise he can live with? I hope it's the latter, because after all his trials he deserves it. But I feel it is the former. Yet, shortly after the book is completed, he films one of his most important roles as Jack Ripper in "Dr. Strangelove." I won't wait 40 years to read this book again.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Embarrassingly Good
Review: I bought my copy of "The Wanderer" when it was first published in 1964, because Sterling Hayden was one of my favorite actors. I especially enjoyed his work in The Asphalt Jungle, Johnny Guitar, The Killing, Suddenly, and Terror in a Texas Town, among others. Now, 40 years later I have decided to reread the book, and I forgot how good it was. The central theme of the book is Hayden's escape from Hollywood, with his young children in tow, on the schooner for which the book is named. He made this voyage to the south seas against orders of the court, who considered it too dangerous for the children. As he tells of this less than idyllic voyage, he intersperses fragments of his life, concentrating mostly on his late teens and twenties when he was a working seaman. He is very stylistic in his writing, and sometimes his switching from first to third person narrative is quite jarring, but the effect is emotionally charging. As he ages into his thirties and beyond, Sterling finds his life falling apart. He becomes a Hollywood heart throb and detests his work and lifestyle. He becomes a Communist for a few months, but never really gets with the program, and to save his hated career, he goes before the HUAC and bares his sole and names names, an action he quickly and forever regretted. He seesaws between impotency and affairs, he can't communicate with the women he loves, he struggles with no notable success with psychotherapy, he finds his life adrift with no anchor in sight. All of these travails he lays out with such frankness, I felt embarassed for him. Hayden holds nothing back as he displays his warts and finds no joy in his life, except with his children. Does he simply settle, or does he come to some kind of compromise he can live with? I hope it's the latter, because after all his trials he deserves it. But I feel it is the former. Yet, shortly after the book is completed, he films one of his most important roles as Jack Ripper in "Dr. Strangelove." I won't wait 40 years to read this book again.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "Wanderer" - the title says it all
Review: I genuinely enjoyed this book. It is an unapologetic autobiography by a complex and sensitive person. I picked it up because I enjoyed Sterling Hayden as an actor, I put it down respecting him as a human. In my opinion, he is not telling his story because he is looking for approval or justification, he is writing the truth about himself, as he perceives it, as an exercise in self-understanding. Enough said, I will not continue to presume to speak for someone who speaks so eloquently for himself.


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