Joseph Conrad

Master Mariner

Based on a previously unpublished study by Alan Villiers

By Peter Villiers

140 pp. 12 Color paintings. 2006. Paperback. $19.95
ISBN 1 57409 244 8
978 157409 224 8





Before he published his first novel in 1895, Joseph Conrad spent twenty years in the merchant navy, eventually obtaining his master’s ticket and commanding the barque Otago, in which he sailed a notable passage from Sydney to Mauritius. This book traces his sea-career, and shows how Captain Jozef Konrad Korzeniowski, master mariner, became Joseph Conrad, master novelist.

Conrad was injured on the Highland Forest, burned out of the Palestine, falsely censured for professional misconduct by the master of the Riversdale, survived a brief and dangerous posting as a river-boat captain on the Congo—and finally served as first officer on the famous Torrens, a passenger ship sailing between Adelaide and Great Britain.

Alan Villiers, world-renowned author and master mariner under sail, was uniquely qualified to comment on Conrad’s life at sea, and his study of the great novelist has now been completed by his son Peter. In addition to a new analysis of Conrad as mariner, the book contains a wealth of detail about the merchant service in the late nineteenth century—the economics of sail, the cargoes, the competition with steam, the skill and teamwork required to maneuver a windjammer, the harsh realities and dangers of everyday life at sea.

 



About the Author:
Alan John Villiers, 1903-1982,born in Melbourne, Australia, started sailing at age 15 and served on ships owned by Gustav Erikson and later in the Arctic and with the Arabs, also as a Commander in WWII. He found his métier combining seafaring with journalism and photography.

Peter Villiers, son of Alan Viliers, has completed this work. He lives in the UK.

HOME PAGE | SEARCH | E-MAIL US | RETURN TO BOATING GENERAL