A girl's own adventure
14 year-old girl fights child-welfare authorities
in quest to sail solo around the world
waves goodbye at age of 14
Adventurers have long held a special place in the public's imagination. Brave and determined or selfish and monomaniacal, according to one's tastes, they are larger-than-life figures, accomplishing impressive - if arguably pointless - feats. Climbing the highest mountain, sailing the widest ocean, risking (and often losing) life and/or limb and leaving wives and children behind to wait, to wonder, and to mourn.
Why do it? we stay-at-homes might ask. Why trek from one coast of Antarctica to the other after failing to be first to the South Pole? Why try, not once but three times to be the first to scale Everest?
There probably isn't a better answer than
George Mallory's laconic reply to a reporter before he died on that third attempt to climb Mount Everest: "Because it's there."
We certainly don't get any more a revealing answer from
Laura Dekker, who at the age of 16 years, 123 days, achieved her years' long dream by becoming the youngest person to ever sail, alone, around the world, but
Jillian Schlesinger's documentary,
Maidentrip about her voyage is a moving and fascinating film despite its lack of firm answers.
The bare facts make for quite a story, and though its subject has disavowed the resulting film, if there is a young woman in your life who could do with something other than a Disney princess or a Kardashian as inspiration,
click here for one hell of a girl's own adventure.
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