Portada

COURSE OF THE WATERMAN IBD

HEAD TO WIND PUBLISHING
02 / 2021
9781939632081
Inglés

Sinopsis

Seventeen-year-old Bailey Kraft, descended from a long line of Chesapeake waterman -- river royalty -- knows where he is going. He will 'follow the water like his father, grandfather, and generations of men before him. The work is backbreaking and often dangerous yet framed by the breathtaking beauty of the Chesapeake, it is a bred-in-the-bone life. But it is also a dying livelihood. Fish stocks are plummeting and with them, the harvests. Watermen, unable to earn a living, are being forced to give up their time-honored way of life. Yet Bailey is a Kraft---river royalty---with the Kraft gift for finding fish coded into his genes. 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, including his best friend, to hang on to his birthright. Set on the Chesapeake BayâÇÖs Eastern Shore, Course of the Waterman is the coming-of-age story of Bailey Kraft, his tough and determined little sister, Hannah, his best friend, Booty, and BootyâÇÖs bitter, alcoholic father, Tud. Bailey faces fear, loss, and wrenching changes, yet amidst it all, he glimpses the unexpected possibilities that life can offer.Like the Kraft men before him, Bailey has river water in his veins, and a peculiar talent for finding fish:áthe Krafts are river royalty. But every year the haul is lessáimpressive, and supporting a family by fishing is becoming increasingly difficult. Early in the book BaileyâÇÖs father Orrin announces that he wants his son to go to college, to have options that he didnâÇÖt 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 fatherâÇÖs 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.áBailey 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. R_obson, 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. RobsonâÇÖs 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.'áLike 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 couldnâÇÖt have written this book the way she did without that experience. Readers like myself who arenâÇÖt familiar with the life she describes--most of us, surely--will encounter some unfamiliar vocabulary her