Rating:  Summary: gets you surfing, you want to be surfing Review: a very good book for someone new to surfing. It doesn't answer all the questions but it helps.
Rating:  Summary: mediocre at best Review: As a long-time climber who finally learned to surf this past year, I naturally assumed there would be a surplus of good instructional/reference books on the market for beginning surfers, like John Long's "How to Rock Climb" series serves for climbers. There aren't. This is one of the few I found, and I supposed it's better than the competition, but that's not saying much.Surfing is less a technical and more of an intuitive type of sport. That said, there are plenty of technical aspects to it, and this book continually falls short in explaining or even mentioning many of them. The chapter on "paddling out," for instance, doesn't even mention duck-diving or turtle-rolling to get outside the wave break, let along teach them. These aren't easy things to do on a big, fat beginner's board, but at some point every surfer will need to learn how to get outside efficiently. A surfing instruction book should give you some hint here, but I had to go searching on the web to find step-by-step instructions because whatever I was doing wasn't working right and this tome is worthless as a reference book after you've been out 2 or 3 times. Another example: the book recommends you get a "big" board. No explanation of the different types of beginner-appropriate boards (longboards, eggs, hybrids) vs intermediate-appropriate boards (shortboards, fish, etc). No description of the impact of different board parameters (rocker angles, nose and tail shapes, thickness) have on how a board handles surf; you're just told it's too complex for you to understand so don't bother to ask. In any sport, you really need some basic instruction from someone who knows what they're doing to really get going. An instructional book should be there to help you remember and make sense of everything afterward, at night when you're not out there practicing. This book doesn't meet those criteria very well.
Rating:  Summary: Just add water! Review: Doug Werner's style is reassuring. There is quite a bit which can be said about surfing and the learning curve incumbent in its practice. As with any sport, the rules, the culture, and the hazards are all covered here in a gentle manner. It might not seem so from the outset, yet it is implied that surfing is not as simple as just going out there and riding waves. Although not covered in depth, Doug touches upon the social aspects of engaging in an activity where expertise can mean safety for yourself and others in the water. He also pays respects to the likes of Duke Kahanamoku and Pat Curren. From the novice point of view, basics of equipment and essential technique are covered. Veterans would probably laugh at this book or wax nostalgic about their gremmy days. A sister publication devoted to longboards has a commercial tie-in from a board maker. This book endorses a surf academy. It is this endorsement which hammers home the idea that proper learning is essential. Besides, I doubt that one could read and surf at the same time.
Rating:  Summary: Just add water! Review: Doug Werner's style is reassuring. There is quite a bit which can be said about surfing and the learning curve incumbent in its practice. As with any sport, the rules, the culture, and the hazards are all covered here in a gentle manner. It might not seem so from the outset, yet it is implied that surfing is not as simple as just going out there and riding waves. Although not covered in depth, Doug touches upon the social aspects of engaging in an activity where expertise can mean safety for yourself and others in the water. He also pays respects to the likes of Duke Kahanamoku and Pat Curren. From the novice point of view, basics of equipment and essential technique are covered. Veterans would probably laugh at this book or wax nostalgic about their gremmy days. A sister publication devoted to longboards has a commercial tie-in from a board maker. This book endorses a surf academy. It is this endorsement which hammers home the idea that proper learning is essential. Besides, I doubt that one could read and surf at the same time.
Rating:  Summary: Best Beginner Book I've Seen Review: Having never surfed, I was in the market for a very simple book to explain some of the basics before I actually got into the waves. This book fit that bill perfectly. It gave very simple lessons about how to start the sport--the necessary equipment, where to surf, how to actually get on your board and a little history of the sport. It didn't rely on surfer lingo that muddles everything up for beginners who are not yet in the know and had a number of excellent photographs to visually capture what the words were trying to say. It is very well written for someone who does not have experience and I think it is a fantastic teaching tool. I would highly recommend this book for all beginners or parents of beginners who just want to have an idea of what their child is getting into. I can't wait to put these lessons into practice.
Rating:  Summary: Really Great for Beginners Review: I bought this books because I have been living on an island for seventeen years, desired to learn how to surf for most of them, but didn't have anyone to teach me. All I can say is this book was more than helpful, with great, detailed step-by-step instructions ranging on topics from what kind of board you want to what waves are best to figuring out how to stand on your board. The illustrations were great and it was a good kick-start of background knowledge and safety that I needed to know before I hit the waves.
Rating:  Summary: Only for the ABSOLUTE beginner Review: I had been surfing for about six or eight months regularly before I bought this book. Thus, there was almost nothing that helpful in here for me; I already knew how to paddle out, pop up, what kind of conditions to look for and which to avoid, I'd already boughten an appropriate board. Nothing in the book mentions more advanced/intermediate tips I was looking for like how to turn/carve, or technical aspects on differences between boards. That said, this book would be good fot total beginners who have not tried surfing yet and just want to be sure of the facts and basics. Many of these things you will pick up intuitively, but some of it will not automatically come naturally, thus the book is good to prevent/check bad habits, create good ones-- i.e. don't look down when you ride a wave, arch your back when you pop up, etc.
Rating:  Summary: Easy to read, excellent illustrations, a good starting point Review: Over 70 photographs combined with easy to read text add up to a basic understanding of what is involved in surfing. Gets you from dry land to the standup position and covers surfing "rules". Most surfing magazines assume you have surfed. This book is for the very beginner.
Rating:  Summary: Incredibly poor binding from the publisher Review: The book is basic, and not badly written; friendly and clear advice and instruction for the would-be surfer, but it's a slim volume-and here's the rub (and the reason for only 2 stars): the binding of this trade paperback was the worst I've seen in quite a while-it fell apart after one read-through, with whole handfuls of the sewn-in pages cascading to the floor. Most defintely NOT what you'd want in any how-to book.
Rating:  Summary: Incredibly poor binding from the publisher Review: The book is basic, and not badly written; friendly and clear advice and instruction for the would-be surfer, but it's a slim volume-and here's the rub (and the reason for only 2 stars): the binding of this trade paperback was the worst I've seen in quite a while-it fell apart after one read-through, with whole handfuls of the sewn-in pages cascading to the floor. Most defintely NOT what you'd want in any how-to book.
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