When John Lee joined the Merchant Navy he had no idea of the adventures
which were to come his way over the next ten years. An innocent sixteen
year old from East Yorkshire, he was first apprenticed to the toughest
of trampship companies before experiencing the potentially explosive
delights of life on an oil tanker.Finally, as a young officer enjoying
rather more civilised surroundings, he is obliged to learn the art of
polite conversation as he mixes with affluent first class passengers and
takes charge of a memorable rescue at sea.... The book is a fascinating
insight into life in the Merchant Navy of the 1950's and 60's peppered
with a wealth of characters and stories. Often hilarious, but always
truthful and entertaining, life on board and in port is described in all
its facets- the typhoons, icy, bone-chilling North Atlantic gales, freak
waves and near disasters, awful food and the demon drink. The stories
and anecdotes come thick and fast of gnarled seadogs and eccentric
captains, knife fights and bandits as well as sex pests and the
beguiling females who haunt the dock gates. This entertaining book is a
window on a way of life now largely gone, a tribute to that unique breed
of men who put their skills and mettle to the test as they crossed the
wild, unforgiving oceans of the world.