Calm at Sunset, Calm at Dawn is a coming-of-age novel of ample beauty, insight, and intensity. Defying the wishes of his family, James Pfeiffer--twenty years old and newly expelled from college--heeds the call of the open waters off the Rhode Island coast. Joining the crew of a broken-down scallop trawler, James seeks to learn the ways of fishermen like his father. Through endless days of exhausting labor in the company of dangerous men, James learns shockingly brutal and unexpectedly sobering lessons. But as James discovers the secrets of his motley crewmembers, he realizes that every fisherman has his own reasons to love the sea, in all its promise and treachery.
After Archangel, The Forger and Night Over Day Over Night I liked Watkins but felt each book somehow just missed. This one did not. Simply one of the best books I have ever read.Watkins writes with a grueling sensitivity that is unparalleled. He writes realistically of the hard, dirty, unrelentingly difficult life of a fisherman with a sensitive hand but without maudlin sympathy. Watkins' succinct writing style adds to the tone. You get to know his main character without really understanding him. Indeed, it is clear he does not understand himself. It would be unfair for the reader to do so.A book of dreams clashing with reality - a place we have all been, especially when youth is meeting adulthood. This is a book you truly will not be able to put down.
Another Paul Watkins book you can't put down
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
Paul Watkins is the best fiction writer alive. Like his other books, "Calm at Sunset" showcases his ability to create true to life characters with a journalist's eye for detail and economy of words. As always, at the heart of his story is a moral core that is absent from most modern fiction. Mr. Watkins writes the kind of book you want to own, to read and re-read, and to pass on to your children.
This is my favorite book.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Paul Watkins is an extraordinarily gifted writer. And he is so easy to read. This is a rare combination. He takes you there. And you can easily identify with his characters. The experiences of James Pfeiffer have become my own. Isn't that why we read?
New England waters we readers will never know as well as he
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
Where to begin...? Perhaps I should just say that last summer when I asked my now-fiance for her hand in marriage on the beach below the Southeast Lighthouse on the beach under Mohegan bluffs, little did I know that James Pfeiffer's grandfather washed up at that very spot! Or that his grandfather is now buried on--or has since been eroded from--the cliff above.The tale must be true, for Watkins gives it as true a rendering as an in-lander such as myself could ever comprehend. Pfeif might find it ironic that I--admittedly much closer to a Gatsby boy than he'd care to be associated with, or than I'd like to admit--would consider his sea saga indelibly inked in my mind, and my soul.Though it was just a momentary setting in the book, I can now say that I have visited Block Island and its waters *twice*--once physically as a tourist, and once metaphysically via Calm at Sunset...--from taking the ferry, to riding out to the bluffs by bike, to smelling the salty air.Strange the way things work out, both in life and in literature. I hadn't known where this story was set, only that it was written by Watkins. But having read _Archangel_ and _In the Blue Light of African Dreams_, that was sufficient. Next Watkins masterpiece! (And let's hope they keep coming!)
Outstanding
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
Paul Watkins relies on his working experiences on a trawler along the Rhode Island coast in order to recreate the world of fishermen. James Pfeiffer is the protagonist. For me, he is an unforgettable character. Against his parents' wishes, James, an innocent young man begins his apprenticeship. Within a short time he encounters the harsh realities of the sea and human nature. I have returned to this novel over the years. I continue to gain insight into personalities and motives. I can no longer look at a beautiful painting of the ocean and believe it to be a place of tranquillity. The writing is intricately detailed. It is visual and immediate. The reader can practically feel the motion of the waves, and see the dazzle of the sunlight on the water. This novel became a Hallmark Hall of Fame film and was televised in 1996. Calm At Sunset Calm At Dawn is one of Watkins' best.
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