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                    |  |  How 
                        To Build A Tin CanoeConfessions of an Old Salt
 by Robb White
 Review by Peter 
                        H. Vanderwaart
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                    |  
                        This is a book of apparently 
                          biographical stories, seemingly arranged in chronological 
                          order. I say 'apparently' because the disclaimer at 
                          the front says flatly that none of the stories are true. 
                          Maybe, but my guess is that none of them is false either. 
                          Sam Glassock, a contributor to the Yahoo! Bolger Group, 
                          offered the following insight: 
                        If you read the 
                          stories by RW in MAIB for a while you begin to realize 
                          that RW is writing about a character, "Robb White", 
                          of his own creation. This character is what we call 
                          in Delaware a progger--a self-reliant countryman--and 
                          an irascible, opinionated, reactionary curmudgeon of 
                          the first order. RW writes too well not to be making 
                          fun of himself along with everything else. This is self-caricature 
                          of the most enjoyable kind, in my opinion, and I think 
                          should be read in that light.  
                        What can we determine 
                          about Robb White, the writer, from Robb White, the character? 
                          A fair amount. Robb White is 
                          a naturalist. He seems to know the habits of 
                          every kind of creature living near the Georgia-Florida 
                          border, and he knows them from personal study and observation. 
                          He admits, somewhat begrudgingly, to a university education 
                          in marine science and oceanography. In the book, flora 
                          and fauna are identified variously by Latin names, accepted 
                          common names, and local nicknames. In true scientific 
                          spirit, he does not blame natural things for anti-human 
                          habits like poisoning and sticking with spines, though 
                          he does admit that biting insects can be an annoyance. Robb White is 
                          a mechanic. The book doesn't say how he learned 
                          about motors and other machinery. I suspect that, as 
                          a child, he took everything apart when his mother's 
                          back was turned - most of the time, to hear him tell 
                          it - and put things back together before anyone noticed. 
                          I'm sure he has never owned a motor, in boat, car or 
                          weedwacker, about which he did know the intimate details 
                          of the carburetor and ignition.  Robb White is 
                          G & T. If you live in a district with a 
                          good school system, you may have a program for the Gifted 
                          and Talented, designed to relieve the hellish burden 
                          that school places on middle schoolers who are too smart 
                          and too quick to stand the boredom of being offered 
                          knowledge at everyman's pace. Schools being bureaucracies, 
                          placement in these programs is often by IQ test, but 
                          the true G&T is not just smart, but a quick and 
                          relentless autodidact. It is difficult to discover anything 
                          that a G&T does not know about his chosen field 
                          of knowledge. Robb White is 
                          a storyteller. If his purpose is to tell you 
                          how to catch a fish, he gives you, not instructions, 
                          but a story about how to catch a fish. He's a writer, 
                          but not a Writer. White's contributions to Messing 
                          About in Boats have an almost violent, stream-of-consciousness 
                          flow. I picture him in the near dark, hunched over an 
                          ancient Underwood manual-hard to imagine him using anything 
                          electric- pounding madly away with two fingers, the 
                          finished pages stuffed into and envelope and mailed 
                          without edit. The stories in the book have been polished 
                          some, but not until they gleam. They retain a certain 
                          patina. Robb White is 
                          boatbuilder. It's not so much a vocation as 
                          a medical condition. His comments on the business remind 
                          me of the story about a boatbuilder who won a big sum 
                          in the lottery. Asked what he was going to do with the 
                          money, he reckoned he'd just keep on building boats 
                          'till the money ran out. Robb White is 
                          a popular philosopher. His words:  
                        I call it "the 
                          rule of joy." Simply put, it says, "The important 
                          thing ain't comfort, it's joy." Joy in boats is 
                          inverse to their size. When they get big and full of 
                          engines, batteries, toilets, stoves, and other comforts, 
                          there just ain't as much room for joy. All those things 
                          are like a bunch of relatives that vote wrong. Not only 
                          do they cancel out the good you are trying to do, they 
                          can beat you, and there is nothing you can do about 
                          it.   
                        If you are an English 
                          teacher, you may wonder why his editor didn't lean on 
                          him a little harder, but if you like quirky stories, 
                          you'll like the book. If you like fishing in thin water, 
                          you'll like the book. If you like eating seafood (especially 
                          just caught and raw), you'll like the book. If you like 
                          to take little boats on big water, you'll like the book. 
                          If you like stories about tugboats and barges, odd and 
                          ancient machinery, blind captains and unreliable crew, 
                          beautiful senoritas and bible-thumping preachers, you'll 
                          like the book. If you like Robb White, and who doesn't, 
                          you'll like the book. Peter 
                          Vanderwaart |  |   
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