Barbarian Days

Barbarian Days

A Surfing Life

4.5 (4,616 ratings from Audible, Apple)
Sign up to track reviews and ratings

Read by: William Finnegan

Language: English

Length: 18 hours and 8 minutes

Publisher: Audible Studios

Release date: 2015-07-21

Charts
PlatformCountryChartLast RankLast Ranked At
AppleUS FlagTop Audiobooks - Sports & Outdoors112September 19, 2024
AppleGB FlagTop Audiobooks - Sports & Outdoors28September 19, 2024
AppleCA FlagTop Audiobooks - Sports & Outdoors40September 19, 2024
AppleAU FlagTop Audiobooks - Sports & Outdoors32September 19, 2024
AudibleUS FlagTop Sports & Outdoors Audiobooks31September 19, 2024
Sign up to see more »

Pulitzer Prize, Biography, 2016

A deeply rendered self-portrait of a lifelong surfer by the acclaimed New Yorker writer.

Barbarian Days is William Finnegan's memoir of an obsession, a complex enchantment. Surfing only looks like a sport. To initiates it is something else entirely: a beautiful addiction, a demanding course of study, a morally dangerous pastime, a way of life.

Raised in California and Hawaii, Finnegan started surfing as a child. He has chased waves all over the world, wandering for years through the South Pacific, Australia, Asia, Africa. A bookish boy and then an excessively adventurous young man, he went on to become a distinguished writer and war reporter.

Barbarian Days takes us deep into unfamiliar worlds, some of them right under our noses - off the coasts of New York and San Francisco. It immerses the listener in the edgy camaraderie of close male friendships annealed in challenging waves. Finnegan shares stories of life in a whites-only gang in a tough school in Honolulu even while his closest friend was a Hawaiian surfer. He shows us a world turned upside down for kids and adults alike by the social upheavals of the 1960s. He details the intricacies of famous waves and his own apprenticeships to them. Youthful folly - he drops LSD while riding huge Honolua Bay on Maui - is served up with rueful humor. He and a buddy, their knapsacks crammed with reef charts, bushwhack through Polynesia. They discover, while camping on an uninhabited island in Fiji, one of the world's greatest waves.

As Finnegan's travels take him ever farther afield, he becomes an improbable anthropologist: unpicking the picturesque simplicity of a Samoan fishing village, dissecting the sexual politics of Tongan interactions with Americans and Japanese, navigating the Indonesian black market while nearly succumbing to malaria. Throughout, he surfs, carrying listeners with him on rides of harrowing, unprecedented lucidity.