(Includes 48 illustrations.) "Of the many books that have been written about the people who live on islands off the Maine coast, few are by individuals who were born and raised on an island. This book is an exception. Born in 1927, Carroll M. Haskell (known as Cabbage to most islanders) grew up on Deer Isle, graduating from Stonington High School in 1945. Over the years, he did all the things island boys did: besides 'getting into mischief, ' he clammed, went lobstering, worked on the granite quarry, and went 'yachting, ' before settling into a career with the telephone company. So here is an authentic voice, the real deal, giving us an insider's account of what island life was like during the difficult years of the Depression and World War II, a period when old island ways were about to give way to a changed world. At the same time, we may delight in the adventures of this resourceful and free-spirited lad, as he confronted the challenges of growing up in a distinct place and time." - William A. Haviland, professor emeritus and founder of the Department of Anthropology, University of Vermont, author of At the Place of the Lobsters and Crabs: Indian People and Deer Isle, Maine, 1605-2005 , coauthor of bestselling textbooks, including Cultural Anthropology and Evolution and Prehistory "Of the many books that have been written about the people who live on islands off the Maine coast, few are by individuals who were born and raised on an island. This book is an exception. Born in 1927, Carroll M. Haskell (known as Cabbage to most islanders) grew up on Deer Isle, graduating from Stonington High School in 1945. Over the years, he did all the things island boys did: besides 'getting into mischief, ' he clammed, went lobstering, worked on the granite quarry, and went 'yachting, ' before settling into a career with the telephone company. So here is an authentic voice, the real deal, giving us an insider's account of what island life was like during the difficult years of the Depression and World War II, a period when old island ways were about to give way to a changed world. At the same time, we may delight in the adventures of this resourceful and free-spirited lad, as he confronted the challenges of growing up in a distinct place and time." - William A. Haviland, professor emeritus and founder of the Department of Anthropology, University of Vermont, author of At the Place of the Lobsters and Crabs: Indian People and Deer Isle, Maine, 1605-2005 , coauthor of bestselling textbooks, including Cultural Anthropology and Evolution and Prehistory "There is something for almost everyone in this delightful [memoir]... Haskell writes, 'My father was very good at storytelling, and before we Deer Islanders had electricity and television, yarns were a way of life.' ... The author has packed over 100 tales into an entertaining book ... [that] follows a loose chronological thread and flows easily from one yarn to the next." - Harry Gratwick, Working Waterfront newspaper, Island Institute, author of books including Hidden History of Maine and Historic Shipwrecks of Penobscot Bay