Product Details
Chasing Dean: Surfing America's Hurricane States

Chasing Dean: Surfing America's Hurricane States
By Tom Anderson

List Price: £7.99
Price: £5.66 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

24 new or used available from £2.85

Average customer review:

Product Description

Two childhood friends from small-town Wales meet in Miami for a summer road trip they've always dreamed of: to chase the swell of Hurricane Dean all the way up the US East Coast in search of once-in-a-lifetime surf. They embark on a hilarious journey of self-discovery and a travel experience like no other. Mixing the humour of Sideways with the extreme conditions of The Perfect Storm, this new book by one of the UK's favourite new travel/surfing writers is a quirky travelogue destined to become a cult classic.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #96028 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-05-05
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
'... will appeal not merely to surfers but to fans of travel writing generally' The Times 'Of all the surf books available today, Riding the Magic Carpet is clearly head and shoulders above the rest - a fantastic read!' Elliot Dudley, European Longboard Champion 'fresh, ingenous and honest - will inspire the urge to explore' Huck Magazine 'There is a dark side to surfing as Tom Anderson brilliantly conveys... Anderson is wise enough to admit that the surfing mentality is skewed to the point of madness... seemingly random surf dude conversations about love and death and the state of the atmosphere play out a philosophical debate between hedonism and seriousness, science and soul... demonstrate[s] that the archetypal surfer does not exist and that surfers may be weirdos but they are weird in wonderfully unpredictable ways.' The Daily Telegraph, June 13th, 2009 'surfing is finally getting the literary tradition it deserves... Anderson travels the Eastern US seaboard during hurricane season, chasing waves created by Hurricane Dean... Anderson s sharp and witty style, allied with a poignant exploration of the nature of friendship, takes his second book into contemporary Kerouac territory.' --The Times, June 6th, 2009

'Part Moby Dick, part Perfect Storm... reads like a novel and has the potential to become a cult classic.' --Real Travel, July 2009

'interplay between Tom and... Marc, demonstrates perfectly the spectrum of human emotion and experience' --St Christophers Inns Live Your Life ezine, July 2009

Review
'Part Moby Dick, part Perfect Storm... reads like a novel and has the potential to become a cult classic.'

Review
`interplay between Tom and... Marc, demonstrates perfectly the spectrum of human emotion and experience... A niche read but a good one.'


Customer Reviews

Not just for surfers4
This is an odyssey of two friends. Tom is a keen surfer who hasn't let his career interfere with his obsession; in fact by writing books in a surfing context he's managed to marry them to some extent. Dr Marc Rhys, once just as keen, has been sidetracked into academic success and delivering papers on baffling scientific matters at prestigious conferences. But they meet in 2006 with an aim: to travel America's east coast hoping for the perfect surfing waves created by a hurricane swell. It's the right season, with some potential hurricanes on the way, including a promising one called Dean; they can only hope it won't disappoint.

Hoping for a category 5 hurricane does of course raise some moral questions, and the dark side of their quest is not ignored. The description of their time in New Orleans is in fact one of the most gripping episodes, when they become aware of both the elemental power of wind and waves and the unquenchability of the human spirit. The observation is sharp and shrewd:

"A couple of miles further over we crossed into those less affluent neighbourhoods, heading south towards St Bernard and the Lower Ninth Ward - the places that hadn't had the same opportunities for evacuation and recovery. Skeleton warehouses lined France Road, alongside ruined shopping malls. More rubble followed, which was once someone's home - a veranda in tatters. The residents had moved to a caravan with a lifebelt tied cautiously to the rear. [...] some of the empty and abandoned properties had been spray-painted with macabre statements which nobody had yet bothered to erase, 'Has been searched' or 'Dead body inside'."

He's also more informative on the practical human results of Katrina than much reportage I have read; I didn't know, for instance, that when survivors were herded into the Superdome all drugs, including prescribed medication, were confiscated, so that, as his informant puts it, "schizophrenics and all sorts were running wild". The degree of paranoia still evident in those he meets, many of whom do seem sincerely to believe that the whole thing was orchestrated to kill off poor people, is both surprising and understandable, to him and us.

Dark side notwithstanding, the quest is about elemental joy, the sheer pleasure of moving with wind and waves, and here his writing is really effective. I don't surf; I can't even swim, and even so he manages to get across the exhilaration he feels. I think one reason he succeeds is that he doesn't stop to explain technical terms; if you know them, fine, if you don't, you can tag along breathlessly in his wake and pick it up as you go along. It worked for me, anyway:

"Duck-diving, I peered down a breaking wave, through the pitching barrel. I felt the vortex and the pull of the lip wanting to drag me back, and then heard the noise, a moving, echoing torque. It was the most enthralling sound on earth, the acoustics of water."

When the writing is energised by the quest, it is really strong. I think it's true that in some of the very early chapters, before he gets to what really interests him, it is less so. Writing of waves, weather systems or friendship he is always sharp, but at odd moments early on, when something interests him less, the language and observation are more perfunctory, and you get dud phrases like "an oasis of unspoilt greenery". But this is rare, and gets rarer as the quest takes hold. The first few chapters are perfectly readable, but not unputdownable. Persevere and you'll soon find it does get an unbreakable hold on you, rather as the quest for Dean did on him.

Page Turning Adventure5
This one is a page turner. It has depth, tension and pace - and a beautiful sense of high adventure. I read a review describing the book as contemporary Kerouac. It stimulates. The characters live. It's thoughful and attractive. The most striking thing though was the speed the story developed. I kept reading, didn't want to put it down and didn't want it to end.

Even better that Riding The Magic Carpet!5
Well, I thought Riding The Magic Carpet was one of the best books around but Chasing Dean is even better. Tom Anderson has the ability to make you want to drop everything and get out of here on a road trip. I never realised the east coast was such an interesting place because when you think of surfing in the USA you normally think California.

This time the book has more of a direct story that Riding did - which makes it really hard to put down. I read it in almost one sitting. I don't think anyone's going to write a better book about surfing in a while. Highly recommended.