Rating: *****
Tags: Biography & Autobiography, Personal Memoirs, Sports & Recreation, Surfing, Travel, Special Interest, Adventure, Lang:en
Publisher: Penguin
Added: January 27, 2019
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
**Winner of the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for
Autobiography
“Reading this guy on the subject of waves and water
is like reading Hemingway on bullfighting; William Burroughs
on controlled substances; Updike on adultery. . . . a
coming-of-age story, seen through the gloss resin coat of a
surfboard.”— *Sports Illustrated
Included in
President Obama’s 2016 Summer Reading
List
*
Barbarian
Days
is William Finnegan’s memoir of an
obsession, a complex enchantment. Surfing only looks like a
sport. To initiates, it is something else: a beautiful
addiction, a demanding course of study, a morally dangerous
pastime, a way of life.
Raised in California and Hawaii, Finnegan started
surfing as a child. He has chased waves all over the world,
wandering for years through the South Pacific, Australia,
Asia, Africa. A bookish boy, and then an excessively
adventurous young man, he went on to become a distinguished
writer and war reporter.
Barbarian
Days
takes us deep into unfamiliar worlds, some of
them right under our noses—off the coasts of New York
and San Francisco. It immerses the reader in the edgy
camaraderie of close male friendships forged in challenging
waves.
Finnegan shares stories of life in a whites-only gang
in a tough school in Honolulu. He shows us a world turned
upside down for kids and adults alike by the social upheavals
of the 1960s. He details the intricacies of famous waves and
his own apprenticeships to them. Youthful folly—he
drops LSD while riding huge Honolua Bay, on Maui—is
served up with rueful humor. As Finnegan’s travels take
him ever farther afield, he discovers the picturesque
simplicity of a Samoan fishing village, dissects the sexual
politics of Tongan interactions with Americans and Japanese,
and navigates the Indonesian black market while nearly
succumbing to malaria. Throughout, he surfs, carrying readers
with him on rides of harrowing, unprecedented lucidity.
Barbarian
Days
is an old-school adventure story, an intellectual
autobiography, a social history, a literary road movie, and
an extraordinary exploration of the gradual mastering of an
exacting, little-understood art.
Praise for
Barbarian Days :
“Without a doubt, the finest surf book I’ve
ever read . . . But on a more fundamental
level,
Barbarian
Days
offers a clear-eyed vision of American boyhood.
Like Jon Krakauer’s
Into the
Wild
, it is a sympathetic examination of what happens
when literary ideas of freedom and purity take hold of a
young mind and fling his body out into the far reaches of the
world.”
—The
New York Times Magazine
“Incandescent . . . I’d sooner press this
book upon on a nonsurfer, in part because nothing I’ve
read so accurately describes the feeling of being stoked or
the despair of being held under. . . . [But] 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.”
—Los Angeles Times
**