What marvelous forum work
Many of these books I never heard of--at my age. A wonderful bunch of knowledge bits.
I have in mind--not committed to doing it yet---a book called Now Read This, a guide to about 100 of great and/or obscure nautical books, summary reviews by me incorporating and cross pollinating ideas and sources, so that a member of the tribe could see what he has missed, and maybe be drawn to get some of them for his library, or at least to know they exist. Many will be used, since out of print.
Ernest Gann--as a former amateur pilot I can only say, is a stunning nonfiction writer: every sailor would also be riveted by his "Fate is the Hunter," about flying the line in the early days, with the astonishing crash rate of DC3s with no nav gear landing in thunderstorms and losing engines right and left. And full of unsuspecting passengers.
In Song of the Sirens, which Keith mentions, Gann buys a fishing boat in Alaska (I think) and is charmed by the frugality of the seller. Then they ride into a gale on the way home and the engine keeps sputtering and losing power. They can;t figure out what's wrong and are certain to perish. Then Gann remembers the seller. What a cheapskate he is. How he hates to spend money on anything. They are about to sink from loss of control when Gann, after this psychological review, has a suspicions and rushes to the sputtering engine room as icey seas sweep the helpless boat. The seller has set the fuel mixture extremely lean--to save gas! They change the setting, the engine roars to happy life, and they continue successfully on.
Gann's fiction--well, fiction is harder.
I do hope, selfishly, that this parade of lesser-known nautical books continues.