Amazon.co.uk Review
When Ellen MacArthur became the youngest person ever to complete yachting's most gruelling race, the Vendée Globe, she also assured herself of a place in sporting history as the fastest woman ever to circumnavigate the globe. As the world watched the images of her disasters and triumphs aboard her boat, MacArthur swiftly entered that pantheon of sportsmen and women whose emotional life we came to share over and above their achievements in their chosen field. We strove against the elements with her, we suffered with her when disaster loomed--and, finally, we could all take vicarious pleasure in her ultimate triumph.
This autobiography proves to have been more than worth the wait. The insights we are granted here into just what MacArthur went through genuinely tug at the heart--and never in any sentimental or manipulative way. Her very air of "ordinariness" (no film-star looks, no breast-beating egomania as in all too many sports personalities) was refreshing, but it's that monumental endurance and skill she demonstrated on her epic voyage that commands our admiration. The earlier sections of the book, detailing her childhood in Derbyshire (quite some distance from the sea) may have us impatient for her great ocean adventure, but they're skilfully and affectingly written. And when she begins her preparations for the Vendée Globe, we take a deep breath, knowing that we'll experience all the arduous adventure and danger that is facing her.
Some may argue that autobiographies are being written by younger and younger authors, with their lives still ahead of them. But surely (in this case) the timing is perfect. --Barry Forshaw
Review
On the evening of Sunday February 11 2001, the site of a diminutive English woman sailing into the port of Les Sables D'Olonne captivated the world. Ellen MacArthur, a 24-year-old from the land-locked county of Derbyshire, had finished the Vendee Globe, generally acknowledged as the world's toughest maritime race. She didn't win the race, she finished second. But that didn't matter. Ellen MacArthur was the youngest person ever to complete the race and the fastest woman to circumnavigate the globe by sea. This is the story of a love affair with the sea and sailing. As a child of four, Ellen was taken on a sailing trip on her aunt's boat and was immediately captivated. Determined to buy herself a dinghy, once home she began to save all her pocket money, keeping track of it on a large chart. She pored over magazines, sending off for the various catalogues and 'filing them in order of the size of dinghy'. At the age of ten she bought her first boat - Threep'ny Bit - and went to her first race training camp. Captivated by the sight of the Whitbread Race whilst recovering from a bout of glandular fever, Ellen decided that race sailing was for her. At the age of 18, she was nominated for and won the BT/YJA Young Sailor of the Year. A year later, in Iduna, she sailed round the coast of Britain and the following year raced single-handedly across the Atlantic. Through her book, one hears Ellen's voice taking us with her through the ups and downs of sailing. She tells of her struggles to get sponsorship. She introduces us to her close-knit sailing 'family'. She takes us with her around Britain, across the Atlantic, on the Route de Rhum and, of course, on the incredible journey of the Vendee Globe. Those of us who were transfixed by the documentary on her Vendee Globe will never forget the sight of this 5ft 3ins figure struggling more than once to climb the mast to fix the sails. Some of her emails are reproduced and the reader is there with her, watching the dolphins, seeing the sunrise, being awed by the icebergs and frightened by the storms. Lavishly illustrated with over 100 colour photographs, this is a book for anyone who ever had a dream. (Kirkus UK)
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