Seaworthy
Adrift with William Willis in the Golden Age of Rafting
In 1953, the 60-year-old Willis sailed a homemade balsa-wood
raft over 4,000 miles across the Pacific from Peru to American
Samoa, accompanied only by a cat and a foul-mouthed parrot. Novelist
Pearson (Glad News of the Natural World) gives a rousing retelling
of how, along the way, Willis endured a hernia and a perforated
ulcer, sewed up an artery ruptured by a shark's tooth and survived
on seawater after running out of fresh. He details Willis's eccentric
diets, yogic breathing exercises and mystic spirituality, his
half-baked, spur-of-the-moment planning, and the uncanny luck
and superhuman hardiness that saw him through the rafting crises.
Pearson places Willis in the context of others who have embarked
upon Kon-Tiki--like epic raft excursions: Willis's was probably
the most daring and quixotic of the bunch, undertaken not to advance
a crackpot archeological theory (one Mormon-led expedition set
out to prove that ancient Israelites had reached Hawaii from California),
but simply to deny his own mortality. Pearson tells this incredible
adventure tale in a breezy but gripping style, steeped in the
lore of the sea and the perverse wisdom of a real-life ancient
mariner.
