Pottersfield Press (2020), 304 pages,
paperback, $21.95. Order your copy from your favourite book store or directly from the distributor, Nimbus publishing, here. Visit Jennifer M. Smith's website here.
It was the book cover that
sparked my attention. A tanned woman standing on the bow of her sailboat as it slices
through a tropical sea under a cerulean sky.
I want to be there,
I thought. I want that.
Maybe
it was the impending third-wave lockdown that was making me long for travel on
the open sea. Given that my outings were going to be limited to grocery store
shopping and pharmacy runs, living vicariously through a husband-and-wife-sailing-team
as they circumnavigated the globe was too good to pass up.
When
I looked past the cover photo and realized I’d met the author in a Brian Henry writing
class, I knew the book was a must have.
Green Ghost, Blue Ocean
proved to be so much more than a welcome escape. From the lush tropical terrain
of Marquesas to the corruption in Madagascar, Jennifer’s vivid descriptions (along
with the maps provided) pull the reader in so that you feel you’re living the experience
with her.
You
get to enjoy the thrill of finding land after travelling many days with no land
in sight. You experience the wonderment of discovering new cultures and the
beauty of dolphins swimming through sparkling tri-coloured waters. You see the
humour in both triumphs and disasters along the way.
This
is no romanticized travel memoir. You see the hard lessons that accompany
equipment failures and gale force winds and what it takes for two people to
solve problems without any access to help. You experience the magnitude of
preparation, not only in provisioning for the journey, but in provisioning for
the life that allowed the journey in the first place.
It’s
all there. All of it.
Even
more than the stories and the challenges faced, it’s the author’s personal
insights that make Green Ghost, Blue
Ocean outstanding. Sprinkled throughout the book, these simple yet
profound gems add an exceptional level of depth to the memoir. In one poignant
moment, the author noted:
“In Madagascar, no one
is ever just passing through. Every person tips the balance and leaves the
place changed. Maybe the same can be said of everywhere you go.”
For
all of these reasons, Green Ghost,
Blue Ocean makes a great read. I especially related to the isolation
faced by Jennifer and Nik as they made their journey. In a COVID world, we are
isolated in unprecedented ways. Most of us are also living in close quarters
with our families and partners, which can present new challenges. Seeing two
people navigate tough situations at sea brought me a new sense of comfort – no
matter what else is happening during this Pandemic, I’m not facing gale-force
winds anytime soon.
I
highly recommend this book. It’s about two people who dare to dream and take
action to make their dream come true. Through their many adventures they
overcome challenges and, in the process, design a life filled with
independence, freedom and meaning.
My
only regret is that I didn’t read it sooner.
***
Connie Taylor is
an Operations Manager by day, a writer and reader by night. Her writing
aspirations began in grade school with her heroine, Pantoulia, who leapt over
football fields of fire. She’s contributed to the Journal of Integrated
Studies and the Fifty Word Stories website. She enjoys writing both fiction
and nonfiction stories.
Note:
Jennifer M Smith will again be a guest speaker during the spring session of
Brian Henry’s Writing Personal Stories Class. See upcoming weekly writing
classes here.
See Brian’s
complete current schedule here, including online and in-person writing workshops, weekly writing classes,
and weekend retreats in Algonquin Park, Alliston, Bolton, Barrie, Brampton,
Burlington, Caledon, Collingwood, Georgetown, Georgina, Guelph, Hamilton,
Jackson’s Point, Kingston, Kitchener-Waterloo, London, Midland, Mississauga,
Oakville, Ottawa, Peterborough, St. Catharines, Southampton, Sudbury, Toronto,
Windsor, Woodstock, Halton, Muskoka, Peel, Simcoe, York Region, the GTA,
Ontario and beyond.
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