Photo de l'auteur

A propos de l'auteur

Jessica Watson was born on May 18, 1993, in Queensland, Australia, where she still lives.

Œuvres de Jessica Watson

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Watson, Jessica
Date de naissance
1993-05-18
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Australie
Nouvelle-Zélande
Pays (pour la carte)
Australie
Lieu de naissance
Gold Coast, Queensland, Australie
Lieux de résidence
Buderim, Queensland (Australie)
Professions
Navigatrice en solitaire

Membres

Critiques

Terrific book and an incredible achievement. This book was written within three months of completing the circumnavigation. At times, it's noticeable and probably would've benefited from a hard edit. Still enjoyable.
½
 
Signalé
kenno82 | 2 autres critiques | May 5, 2017 |
Jessica Watson is the Australian teenager who sailed solo, non-stop and unassisted round the world aged sixteen. Her story of the adventure doesn't rise to any great literary heights, but it's well-told and enjoyable, and it only increased my admiration for her courage, skill and determination. If you enjoy tales of real-life adventure, I recommend this book.
 
Signalé
timjones | 2 autres critiques | Sep 22, 2011 |
Opening Sentence: ‘…A half-moon had risen, giving the sea a silvery sheen above the darkness below …’

I am a huge fan of this gutsy young Australian girl and watched her journey from go to whoa. I was one of many who logged into her blog daily to see if she had written another post, and read the comments left by other blog watchers. This ever growing community shared her journey nautical mile by nautical mile.

On 15th May 2010 this 16 year old girl completed her personal challenge of sailing non-stop, single handed around the world. It had taken her 210 days and along the way she waspounded by gale force winds, downed seven times by huge waves, suffered sleep deprivation and battled loneliness. Thousands and thousands of people lined Sydney harbour, and an even bigger TV viewing audience (myself included) watched, to cheer her on as she sailed pass the finished line.

Jessica Watson writes well, she writes from the heart and tells you like it is. Her book is just an expansion of her blog; using excerpt from he blog, Jessica takes you behind the scenes, fills us in on the things that were going on in the background, things that she didn’t want to worry her parents about, or her blog followers. Like how she noticed that ‘Ella Pink Lady’ was still leaking after she had set sail and she worried that she would have to fix it herself or turn back. The problem rectified itself. In fact ‘Ella Pink Lady’ was as much of the focus as Jessica herself. All through her journey, and her book, Jessica write ‘we.’ We had calm weather, we had a visitor today. Jessica’s little yacht was the other half of this adventure, and has not been left out of the story.

As she embarked on her voyage, there was much public debate as to whether Watson was too young to be tackling the trip on her own, and what were her parents think they were doing letting her go. Jessica fills in the background of how she got the compulsion to sail around the world, and what she had to do to launch off in October 2009 and sail off into adventure.

Jessica is a slip of a thing. She looks like a breath of wind would blow her away – but she has the inner strength that is typical of the seafaring heroes she admired. Fighting mountainous seas in gale force winds not only did she not blow away she arrived safely in calm waters slightly battered but never beaten. We say she is a hero she says she is “just an ordinary girl who had a dream and worked hard at it and proved that anything is possible” .
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
sally906 | 2 autres critiques | Oct 15, 2010 |

Prix et récompenses

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Statistiques

Œuvres
10
Membres
194
Popularité
#112,877
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
3
ISBN
26
Langues
3

Tableaux et graphiques