Memoirs of a Gloucester Fisherman


Book Description

Memoirs of a Gloucester Fisherman is one man’s story of a lifetime spent seafaring out of Gloucester – a personal record, an intimate summing-up, of unusual candor and strength. At the same time, Salve Testaverde’s account represents an important document in the history of commercial fishing over the past fifty years. In the span of his working life, which began in 1931 on his father’s boat, R. Salve Testaverde has seen the coastal fishery of New England change, and adapt to change, relentlessly. The story of his career traces the ups and downs of the Gloucester fleet as shifting market conditions and developing technology challenge its men to adapt and survive. But Memoirs of a Gloucester Fisherman is also a story of the love between a woman and a man, of a marriage that flourished through the hardships and uncertainties of the Depression, the War, and, of his wife and the home she made for her family brings us deep inside the man himself – his doubts, his joys, his ways with the people he loves. Just as indelibly, we see the Testaverdes against the sharply drawn backdrop of Gloucester’s fishing community. In scenes of extraordinary vitality, Salve Testaverde describes the daily life of the Fort neighborhood as it was in the ‘20s; the first of the famous fiestas in honor of St. Peter; the competition and especially the camaraderie among the men of the fleet, culminating in their triumphant cooperative effort to create the Fisherman’s Wharf. In Salve Testaverde’s song of himself, we hear the true voice of a community and a way of life. Memoirs of a Gloucester Fisherman is an unforgettable book.




The Sea Made Men: The Story of a Gloucester Lad


Book Description

This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions that are true to the original work.







The Finest Kind


Book Description

A portrait of the Glouchester fishermen made famous in "The Perfect Storm." This powerful work brings the reader along with the fishermen as they plow the treacherous sea in search of the elusive and dwindling schools of fish. Kim Bartlett lets us hear the men speak and puts readers right on the boat with them. 14 photos.




The Masts of Gloucester


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Fast and Able


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Down to the Sea


Book Description

The story of the swift but perilous Gloucester schooners and of the men who built, sailed, raced and fished them.




Genealogical and Personal Memoirs


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Gloucester


Book Description

In the summer of 1979 Nubar Alexanian stepped aboard the vessel Joseph and Lucia II for ten days of fishing on Georges Bank with the Brancaleone family of Gloucester, Massachusetts and their crew. More trips followed in 1980 and 1981, and the photographs taken on those voyages form the heart of this book. They show the photographer's intimate connection with his subjects, and with Gloucester itself.The sea gives and it takes; fishermen and their families look mortality in the face every working day. We cannot say what gives the people of Gloucester their determination and perseverance, but photographs capture the spirit when words cannot, and they can make time and tide stand still. When Alexanian was taking photographs aboard the Joseph and Lucia II, he was documenting a way of life that would soon slip away and never return. His photographs lay bare the heart of a city that literally and figuratively faces the sea, its most enduring ally and its nemesis. He has chronicled both life at sea and the upland rhythms of Gloucester in images taken over a period of four decades, weaving from Georges Bank through the streets and woods, beaches and baptisms, the granite and the granite-willed. In these images of day-to-day life, of rituals, celebrations, and the ever-changing landscape, people coexist with nature's bounties and uncertainties as they have for hundreds of years.Gloucester: When the Fish Came Fish is as much an invitation as a documentary work. Alexanian's photographs reveal the spirit of this place and the strength of her people. Complex and ruggedly beautiful, they honor Gloucester's enigmatic soul, her resilient spirit, and her hard-won character. Against all odds, this is a place that continues to believe in itself.




Memoirs of a Shape-Shifter


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