Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 1st August 2014
Paperback
Published: 7th December 2001
Hardback
Published: 1st October 1989
We Didn't Mean To Go To Sea
By (Author) Arthur Ransome
Vintage Publishing
Jonathan Cape Ltd
1st October 1989
20th October 1983
United Kingdom
Children
Fiction
823.912
Hardback
352
Width 145mm, Height 203mm, Spine 35mm
496g
'Like to spend a night in the Goblin' The Swallows are staying on the Suffolk coast while they wait for their father to return home from China. But although the harbour is bursting with bobbing yachts, barges and steamers, this year there's no chance of any sailing for the landlocked Swallows. That is until they rescue young Jim Brading and his boat the Goblin from a sticky situation and to their delight are recruited as crew members. Mother agrees they can go, on one condition - they absolutely must not sail out past Beach End Buoy and into the open sea.
This book is Ransome at the top of his form. * OBSERVER *
The book is a record of an uncovenanted voyage, which ended in Holland, of the rain and wind, the darkness and the wild water, the escapes from buoys and from ships crossing in the night, the courage and resource of the children. * EVENING STANDARD *
Perhaps the best of all ... Just what does happen is told with all the wealth of practical detail and satisfying sense of reality which make Mr Ransome so unfailingly successful. * PUNCH *
The most exciting of the whole Swallows and Amazons series. * NEW STATESMAN *
The seventh of the Arthur Ransome books, and I really think it is the best. * SUNDAY TIMES *
Arthur Ransome was born in Leeds in 1884 and went to school at Rugby. He was in Russia in 1917, and witnessed the Revolution, which he reported for the Manchester Guardian. After escaping to Scandinavia, he settled in the Lake District with his Russian wife where, in 1929, he wrote Swallows and Amazons. And so began a writing career which has produced some of the real children's treasures of all time. In 1936 he won the first ever Carnegie Medal for his book, Pigeon Post. Ransome died in 1967. He and his wife Evgenia lie buried in the churchyard of St Paul's Church, Rusland, in the southern Lake District.