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Book Review

Publisher's Note:

Temping the night shift in a high-rise cubicle, Erik Orton knew something had to change. He felt the responsibility of providing for his wife and their five children the youngest with Down syndrome but craved a life that offered more than just surviving. Watching the sailboats on the Hudson River during his sunset dinner breaks, Erik dared to dream. What would it be like to leave the hustle of the city and instead spend a year on a sailboat, somewhere beautiful, as a family? Despite having no sailing experience, his wife Emily's phobia of deep water, and already stretching every dollar to pay rent and buy groceries, the family of seven turned their excuses into reasons and their fears into motivation. Sure, they would miss their friends, they could go broke, they could get injured or die. Worst of all, they could humiliate themselves by trying something audacious and failing. But the little time they still had together as a family, before their oldest daughter left for college, was drifting away. The Ortons cast off the life they knew to begin an uncertain journey of 5,000 miles between New York City and the Caribbean, ultimately arriving at a new place within themselves. A portrait of a captivating and resilient family and a celebration of the courage it takes to head for something over the horizon, this is a deeply compelling story told alternately by Erik and Emily for everyone who dreams of leaving routine in their wake.…

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Seven at Sea

by Erik Orton and Emily Orton

Overall Book Review:

Seven at Sea is a recounting of the adventures of a family of seven who leave their two-bedroom apartment in New York to live on a boat to sail the Caribbean for almost a year. The book covers the logistics of day-to-day living they faced including how the dream began, preparations before they left, learning how to sail, obstacles of fixing the boat, sailing information, descriptions of the islands they visited, how they gathered supplies, and making life-long friends along the way. It was interesting to see the juxtaposition of Erik’s perception on events next to Emily’s–husband and wife–as well as some insight as to what their children were experiencing.

Beyond the technical and obvious sailing portion of this book, there are underlying themes of the importance of taking risk, overcoming fears, living life in the now, slowing down to go with the flow, and doing what is most important. This book almost makes you want to take up sailing!

This book was sent to Compass Book Ratings for review by Shadow Mountain


Content Analysis:

Profanity/Language:  1 mild obscenity.

Violence/Gore:  Report of a man in a car accident; report of a man getting a deep cut on his head; a minor receives a rope burn during a sailing incident.

Sex/Nudity:  A few sexual references; a few implied instances of sexual activity; a few non-sexual depictions of nudity–minors running around naked, minors skinny dipping.

Mature Subject Matter:

Dangerous travel conditions; marital difficulties.

Alcohol / Drug Use:

Reference to drunken sailors; minor takes a sip of wine unbeknownst to parents.

Overall Book Rating
Profanity/Language
Rating:
2
10
Violence/Gore
Rating:
1
10
Sex/Nudity
Rating:
3
10

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About the Reviewer

My favorite books are ones that change me and my perceptions of the world in a significant way. My favorite genre is probably historical fiction with biographies as a close second.