Search results for ""Author Rod Scher""
Rowman & Littlefield Sailing by Starlight: The Remarkable Voyage of Globe Star
In 1982, a hobby sailor and retired geography professor named Marvin Creamer embarked on a very special circumnavigation: On his 36’ steel ketch, Globe Star, Creamer and his crew ventured out into the Atlantic a few days before Christmas on the first leg of the voyage, bound for Africa. On board they carried absolutely no navigation instruments of any kind: no LORAN, no GPS or AIS (civilian versions of which did not, in any case, exist in 1982), no sextant or astrolabe, no radar . . . nothing. They didn’t even have a clock on board. They had some rudimentary charts and maps of the trade winds and that was it. What they did carry with them was Marv’s blue-water sailing experience and his knowledge of the Earth, the stars, and of the winds and waves. Eighteen months later, Creamer returned, having shown the world—or as much of it as was paying any attention—that one could sail around the globe without using any instruments. Creamer’s intent was to prove that such a voyage could be successful, showing that ancient peoples—e.g., the Norse, the South Pacific Islanders, and possibly others—could well have traveled the world’s oceans using only their brains, their five senses, and the experience of multiple generations of their seafaring ancestors. The trip was ultimately successful, but Creamer was beset by almost-constant problems. That makes for an exciting tale, and provides some exceptional examples of seafaring ingenuity and sheer determination on the part of Creamer. The author was given exclusive access to Creamer’s diaries, photos, and other memorabilia by Creamer’s family.
£22.50
Rowman & Littlefield Leveling the Playing Field: The Democratization of Technology
Leveling the Playing Field explores the technologies that “trickle down” to the rest of us, those that were once the domain of the wealthy and powerful--and which therefore tended to make them even more wealthy and powerful. Now, though, these technologies--from books to computers to 3D printing and beyond--have become part of a common toolkit, one accessible to almost anyone, or at least to many more than had heretofore had access. This is what happens with most technologies: They begin in the hands of the few, and they end up in the hands of the many. Along the way, they sometimes transform the world.
£20.50
Globe Pequot Press Ship of Lost Souls
£25.00