A book that I really enjoyed narrating just went live on Audible. Pacific Lady: The First Woman to Sail Solo Across the World's Largest Ocean by Sharon Sites Adams with Karen Coates is a terrific nonfiction story of a spunky and very determined woman. From Audible:
"It was an age without GPS and the Internet, without high-tech
monitoring and instantaneous reporting. And it was a time when women
simply didn't do such things. None of this deterred Sharon Sites Adams.
In June 1965, Adams made history as the first woman to sail solo from
the mainland United States to Hawaii. Four years later, just as Neil
Armstrong very publicly stepped onto the moon, the diminutive Adams,
alone and unobserved, finally sighted Point Arguello, California, after
74 days sailing a 31-foot ketch from Japan, across the violent and
unpredictable Pacific. She was the first woman to do so, setting another
world record.
"Inspiring and exciting, Adams's memoir recounts
the personal path leading to her historic achievements: a tomboy
childhood in the Oregon high desert, an early marriage and painful
divorce, and a second marriage that ended when her husband died of
cancer. In the wake of his death and almost by accident, Adams
discovered sailing. Six weeks after her first sailing lesson, she bought
a boat, and within eight months, she set out to achieve her first world
record. Pacific Lady recounts the inward journey that paralleled
her sailing feats, as Adams drew on every scrap of courage and
navigational skill she could muster to overcome the seasickness,
exhaustion, and loneliness that marked her harrowing crossings."
I've had the honor of speaking with Sharon Adams several times during the recording of this book. She's 85 now but as peppy as ever. Last year she went skydiving and lately she's been looking around for a place with hot air balloons. She wants to go for a ride!
To listen to a sample and or purchase Pacific Lady, click here on Audible.
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