I married a boat

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256 pages 1953

About This Book

"That I cannot sew a fine mean, " Anita Marsland explains, "is unimportant. Because I *can* attach a rope to a sail, which requires only a sailor's palm, a firm shove, and nice big stitches.

"There was a time -- in the Pre-Boat Era, of course -- when my activities were not nautically centered. My years at the University of California revolved around *The Daily Californian*, or which I was a senior editor. Summers, I worked in the San Francisco Public Library, where I continued as a utility gal until the Depression swept me back to the University for a graduate year to become a high school teacher."

Came then the Boat, with her husband, and the Crew -- Johnny and Stan, now 17 and 13. Her spare hours ashore went into writing about boats: yachting articles for the national magazines, a weekly San Francisco Bay sailing column as *Tops'l Annie*, short stories, and book review notes.

The shortage of teachers during the war took Mrs. Marsland back to the classroom, first part time, and then as a journalism advisor in a Los Angeles high school. After the family changed Coasts -- and Boats -- she enrolled on Study Leave in Dr. Mabel Louse Robinson's Advanced Fiction Workshop at Columbia University. "I Married a Boat," which is *not* fiction, was the inevitable result. She still does substitute teaching in Connecticut.

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