Time Bandit: Two Brothers, the Bering Sea, and One of the World's Deadliest Jobs | Andy Hillstrand, Johnathan Hillstrand, ... | Great book
books:
Time Bandit: Two B...
Time Bandit: Two Brothers, the Bering Sea, and One of the World's Deadliest Jobs
Andy Hillstrand
,
Johnathan Hillstrand
, ...
Ballantine Books
, 2008 - 240 pages
average customer review:
based on 48 reviews
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highly recommended
?Many brave hearts are asleep in the deep, so beware, beware,? goes the chorus of an old sailors? sing-along that celebrates the allure and danger of the
sea
faring life. But make no mistake?there truly is much to beware for those who are drawn to risk their lives and seek their fortunes upon the waves. And perhaps n
one
take more chances than the men and women who brave the tempestuous, bountiful waters of the
Bering
Sea. Season after season, they bond and battle with its icy depths, determined to reap yet one more rewarding harvest while eluding the ever-present threat of sudden, certain death. And among the rapidly diminishing ranks of these die-hard salts,
brothers
Andy and Johnathan Hillstrand have forged a reputation as fierce masters of their treacherous, enthralling trade. If you?ve watched their exploits on TV?s
Deadliest
Catch, you?ve only scratched the surface. To read
Time
Bandit
is to step into their skins, smell the sea air, feel the frigid wind, and know with all your senses the exhilarating, and terrifying life on the edge.
Natives of tiny, fishing hamlet, Homer, Alaska; sons of a hard-bitten, highly successful fisherman; and born with brine in their blood, the Hillstrand boys couldn?t imagine a life without a swaying deck underfoot and a harvest of mighty Alaskan king crabs waiting to be pulled from the ocean floor. In pursuit of their daily catch, the brothers brave ice floes and heaving waves 60 feet high, the perils of 1000-lb steel traps thrown about by the punishing wind, and the constant menace of the open, hungry water.
Even the brothers? downtime on land?where the deadly realities of the unforgiving sea are never far from their minds?is lived as if borrowed: fast and hard, haunted by the knowledge that the next season at sea could end asleep in the deep.
Here is the Hillstrands? own heartfelt hymn to the brutally hard, gloriously independent, and mysteriously soul-satisfying life that has earned them their daily bread and defined their existence. By turns raucous and reflective, exhilarating and anguished, enthralling, suspenseful, and wise, Time Bandit chronicles a larger-than-life love affair as old as civilization itself?a love affair between striving, willful man and inscrutable, enduring nature.
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Crab fishing.
I really enjoyed this book. It is well written and very informative. I watch
Deadliest
Catch every day, and can't wait for the new
sea
son to start. Johnathan and Andy Hillstrand are to be commended for getting this book published. They are my favorite fishermen and I really like the crew also. I cannot recommend this book enough. It is excellent. I loved each and every word and could not in all h
one
sty put this book down. I think I read this most excellent book faster and in a shorter
time
then any book I have read, and I have read hundreds of different books in my adult life. If you like the show, you MUST get this book.
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Great book
This book can hardly be laid down, which is surprising for its genre. It was received in the condition advertised.
Sit in your armchair and feel the salt spray chill your face...
There is no question that
Time
Bandit
finds an eager audience among fans of the American TV show "
Deadliest
Catch," but I was pleasantly surprised to find that the book stands up well on its own as an entertaining and informative read. The
brothers
Hillstrand have a pirate's lode of great fishing stories, but the book doesn't stop there. These men are also admirably candid about their personal histories and the tough issues they deal with on land (families, obligations, personal demons, compliance with fishing regulations, outfitting for the next fishing run, hiring/firing crew, etc).
The first and dominant voice in the narrative is Johnathan Hillstrand whose delivery struck me as egotistical and arrogant to the point that I almost didn't stick around to give the book a chance--but I'm glad I did. After all, the book opens with the "bad boy of the
Bering
Sea
" perilously adrift and al
one
, and even if he does seem a bit full of himself, I wanted to see how he would get out of his dire predicament. His life-threatening situation serves as the literary focus to reflect on his life--kind of a slow-motion version of seeing your lifetime pass before your eyes before you die. Thus unfolds Johnathan's entertaining story, reminiscences of his life, interspersed with the narrative of his brother Andy and the fellow fishermen who eventually rescue him.
At first, I thought the writing style was too unpolished and the tone overbearingly arrogant but as I got to "know" Johnathan better, and then his brother Andy, I decided to cut them some slack. After all, if fishermen were born to be writers, they wouldn't be fishermen, and vice versa (with the exception of Linda Greenlaw who is both a good writer and fisherman). Thankfully, the authors enlisted the help of seasoned writer Malcolm MacPherson who I presume is responsible for making a cohesive work from
two
lifetimes of harrowing stories. More effort in that direction would have further improved the book.
Time Bandit is great entertainment. Tales of near death, living on the edge, the roughness of life on sea and land, gave me a great escape into a
world
I could never approach in my real life. I take points off for the literary weakness of the book which is apparently aimed at the established TV audience as a "mixed media" marketing effort. When the TV show eventually ends and the DVD market is sated, the book will not have much literary quality to sustain it as a book alone.
Sharing similarities with Time Bandit in ocean-going subject matter, here are a few recommendations which are stronger literary works: _The Hungry Ocean_ and _The Lobster Chronicles_ by Linda Greenlaw, _The Perfect Storm_ by Sebastian Junger, _Hen Frigates_ by Joan Druett, and _Cod_ by Mark Kurlansky.
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If you love Deadliest Catch
If you love
Deadliest
Catch and the Hillstrand
brothers
you will really enjoy this book. They are my favorite captains on the show becuase of thier sense of humor.
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