A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe PDF Print E-mail
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Monday, 27 December 2010 12:21

By John MacGregor

A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe
Paperback . . . . . $17.99

"I am so very well acquainted with the Rob Roy canoe and have taken passage in her with so much pleasure . . ."

--Charles Dickens

SYNOPSIS

A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe recounts the travels of John MacGregor in a "decked" canoe, known now as a kayak, on the lakes and rivers of Europe in 1865.

 

The book details the joys and difficulties of this pioneering paddler from his first "shakedown" cruise down the Thames and on the edge of the English Channel to his final triumphal paddle up the Seine into Paris.

 

"Lovers of the water sports -- canoeing and kayaking -- will enjoy having this book with its vivid view of what the sport has come from. Armchair travelers will like the visit to a vanished way of life. Children, Such as I was at the age of 12, may well be enchanted and encourage their seeking out other books by earlier "independent travelers" as MacGregor was styled. A great read for vacation or a wish for one. This reader loved it."

--Patricia J. Bell, author of Roughing It Elegantly:
A Practical Guide to Canoe Camping

As MacGregor was making the trip in 1865, his voyages became an international event that was cataloged in newspapers as far away as the United States. "Canoe spotting" became a popular pastime in Europe as MacGregor made his way as whimsy dictated down some of the most well known waterways in the world.

His observations recall a fascination with the glorious days of life that many find missing in the rush of our modern world. His prose is easy to read, much more modern in pace than his Victorian contemporaries. Altogether, a wonderful read for those who appreciate adventure.

"If we dare to think of kayaking as having a literature the way fishing does, then MacGregor is our Izaak Walton."

--Brian Kologe, Sea Kayaker magazine, 1999

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

John MacGregor

John MacGregor was born Jan 24, 1825, the son of General Sir Duncan MacGregor, K.C.B. His mother was the youngest daughter of Sir William Dick, baronet of Prestonfield. He graduated as 34th "wrangler" at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1847, received his M.A. in 1850, and was called to the bar at the Inner Temple in 1851.

Before he was called, however, MacGregor had already established a small reputation as a traveler. In 1849, he traveled overland across Europe to the Levant and on to Egypt, a nine-month tour which he wrote about in Three Days in the East (1850). By 1851 MacGregor had traveled to Russia, worked his way southward to Algeria and Tunis, and then by ship to Canada and the United States, an adventure which he later sketched in Our Brothers and Cousins, a Tour in Canada (1859).

Originally a patent lawyer, MacGregor generally ignored the practice after 1853 and devoted his life to travel and philanthropy. In addition to A Thousand Miles, he also wrote three other popular voyaging books: A Voyage alone in the Yawl Rob Roy (1867); The Rob Ray on the Baltic (1867); and The Rob Roy on the Jordan, Red Sea, and Gennesareth (1869). For each trip, MacGregor had a new decked canoe built which retained its predecessor's title.

"When John MacGregor, of the Inner Temple, published his entertaining account of the Rob Roy's thousand mile voyage on the lakes and rivers of Europe, he established canoeing as a summer pastime."

--Harper's New Monthly Magazine, 1880

A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe is generally considered to have been one of the most popular books of 1866--in modern parlance: the year's top nonfiction bestseller. The novelty of MacGregor's mode of travel in 1865 generated newspaper coverage not only across Europe but also as far away as the United States, Canada, and South America. In many ways, this trip was one of the first "media events" ever recorded across continents.

MacGregor is generally recognized as the prime inspiration for the growth of canoeing, canoe camping, and canoeing clubs in Europe and America (he was also the founder of the Royal Canoe Club which was "commodored" by the Prince of Wales), and by extension, the father of modern sea kayaking. In fact, the several versions of the Rob Roy were "decked" canoes, or in modern terms, a hard-shell sea kayak.

What hasn't been recognized about MacGregor, however, is that his books, written in the mid-Victorian period, foreshadow the shift in style toward terse, fast-paced prose without the embellishment often seen as a hallmark of Victorian style. In many ways, MacGregor's writing style is more modern and descriptive than such a writer as Robert Louis Stevenson whose account of a similar canoe voyage in the 1880s became his first book, An Inland Voyage.

MacGregor died on July 16, 1892, shortly after finishing the end notes found in this reprinted edition of A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe.

". . . An original traveler, striking out new methods for himself, taking his own views of men, progress and things, and telling with boyish frankness what he thought and felt."

--Edwin Hodder, MacGregor's biographer

Title: A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe
Subtitle: Through the Canals and Rivers of Europe
Author: John MacGregor
Publisher: Dixon-Price Publishing
Mechanicals: 5.5 x 8.5 - trade paperback
ISBN-10: 1-929516-06-1
ISBN-13: 978-1-929516-06-3 Price: U.S. $17.99

 

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Last Updated on Monday, 27 December 2010 18:18
 

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