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hellwoman
02-12-2007, 11:17 AM
Surfing’s Greatest Misadventures:
Dropping In on the Unexpected
Edited By Paul Diamond and Tyler McMahon


Required reading right here, a future staple of Surf Culture 101 collegiate classes. Much of surfing’s enduring culture is passed along the chain of wave-riders and ocean folk through tall tales and reports from around the world. Surfing has its own historical mythology, and the intense bonding of sharing stories after a session, or during a flat spell, or while on a long slog of travel, adds to it. Surfers, some of the world’s most colorful characters, consistently find themselves in activities beyond the average worldly experience. But the best voices, stories and storytellers are more likely to be found out in the field, out on the journey, along the trail of the tropics, and if you’re not there, then you’re not tapping the source.

Paul Diamond and Tyler McMahon did the legwork of corralling a remarkable collection of those stories and storytellers to produce Surfing’s Greatest Misadventures: Dropping In on the Unexpected. The stories are so good this book achieves mass appeal; drama, humor, loss and gain, wisdom, failure, humility...serious literature, bro, go ahead and lose yourself. This collection features professional writers and editors mixed in with industry types, active participants and interested bystanders, and there’s not a bad tale in the lot. Ben Marcus with Greg Noll on Miki Dora, Steve Pezman on Trestles then and now, a few selections of Matt George’s incomparable style, Buzzy Kerbox, Shawn Alladio, Fernando Aguerre, Terry Gibson’s heavy-duty tour of the Transkei; shark attacks, birds exploding jet engines, navigating storm-tossed seas for 12 hours with nothing but an AM radio signal, a surf contest for homeless guys...there is a lot here, and it’s all good. Do yourself a favor and get this book, enjoy the heck out of it, and pass it on. — Owen Michael, Surfer Magazine

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Diamond and McMahon have done well to focus on misadventures. There's something special about stories in which people find themselves in over their heads. It's a feeling familiar to any surfer, a reminder to be humble in the face of the awesome power of the ocean.

And in this collection, there's plenty of humility to go around. Terry Gibson loses a fellow surf traveler to a shark in South Africa's Transkei. Regular-guy surfer Joe Doggett finds himself in trouble while surfing Oahu's North Shore with friend and big-wave charger Ken Bradshaw. Shawn Alladio, one of the world's most experienced personal-watercraft drivers, rescues surfer Ian Armstrong after a massive wipeout at Dungeons in South Africa.

A surprising number of these stories go beyond a thrills-and-spills approach, penetrating deeper into the culture. Matt George's "Three Portraits of Sumatra" celebrates the surfing prowess of a new generation while also questioning whether today's traveling surfer exploits more than he explores. Ben Marcus' account of Miki Dora's antics and Steve Pezman's memories of sparring with Marines from Camp Pendleton at Trestles beach (now part of San Onofre State Beach) summon nostalgia for the old days of surfing, when the sport was the domain of beach bums and ne'er-do-wells.

Surfing's Greatest Misadventures makes for gripping reading — as one would expect from a book with sections labeled "Sharks" and "Big Water, Big Trouble." But in the end, what's remarkable is how moving the stories can be. They stick in the memory. Just the other day, while walking back to my house after a surf session, I caught myself repeating one of the stories to a friend as if it were something I'd heard from another surfer. "By the people, for the people" indeed. -- LA Times Book Review, Antoine Wilson


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