About Lois

Lois Joy Hofmann is the author of Maiden Voyage, Sailing the South Pacific, and The Long Way Back, all part of the nautical trilogy entitled In Search of Adventure and Moments of Bliss. Her first two books won first place in the Travel category of the San Diego Book Awards: Maiden Voyage in 2011 and Sailing the South Pacific in 2013. The Long Way Back won in 2019 in the category of Published Travel.

Her stories have appeared in magazines such as Latitudes and Attitudes, Cruising World and Living Aboard. Hofmann has been a contributor to online magazines and blogs such as: Multihull Magazine, Yacht Blogs, Multihull newsletter, Top Dekk and The Log. Hofmann has also been a keynote speaker for various organizations including: yacht clubs, optimist clubs, book stores and libraries. Now that she has completed writing the book trilogy, Lois has further enjoyed travel with her husband Günter to those countries they did not visit during their 8-year, 62-country sailing circumnavigation. She currently posts her adventures on her blog Sailors Tales.

Reviews

Author Marie Chapian

A review by New York Times Best-Selling Author Marie Chapian

A BEAUTIFUL BOOK!
Here is one of the most beautiful books you’ll see this year. Packed with exquisite photos, the author has journaled a 34,000-mile sailing adventure on their 43-foot Catana catamaran, “
Pacific Bliss,” that will set your heart a-sailing. Hofmann and her husband, Günter, both in their sixties, decided to do what most of us only dream of at any age –they up and left their busy, and successful corporate lives and sailed around the world.
Gulp. Did I say sailed around the world? It took them eight years, but yes, they achieved their nautical triumph and circumnavigated the entire globe. You can only sigh with awe as you live their adventure with them throughout this gorgeous book that covers their first voyage from France to San Diego If the photographs aren’t amazing enough, the experiences Hofmann tells about will rivet your imagination -stories of Gibraltar and Morocco, the Pillars of Hercules, the Canary Islands and San Blas Islands, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, and more exotic and not-so-exotic settings they sailed to.

But all of sailing isn’t bliss, and the Hofmanns met with some death-defying experiences. On a 600 mile passage to Catagnena, Columbia , they met with a pair of blinding white lights, and realized another ship was headed directly at them, threatening to crush them upon impact. They were missed by a hair. She tells stories of being caught in dreaded storms on the sea of winds at Force 9 and 10, (Force 8 is a gale) and wind speed of 50-plus knots. “Some of the waves hit Pacific Bliss so hard the entire structure shudders at high frequency. The sounds of creaking, bombing and banging are awful.” They pray she’ll hold together.

And hold together she does. This book has something for everyone. If you’re a sailing aficionado you’ll enjoy the sailing reportage, detailing every technical move of the journey. If you enjoy geography and little-known facts, Hofmann has included “Did You Know?” sections where she reveals fascinating information about the places they sail to and from. If you’re an adventurer, you’ll be inspired and thrilled by the courageous and ambitious undertaking of this husband-and-wife team who made a dream come true.

And! If you are simply a lover of beautifully and affordably produced books to enliven any coffee table or library, you won’t want to miss this adventure book of the year.
P. S. Did I say exciting?
Marie Chapian
www.mariechapian.com

M. Brist “GaleCrewe”

By M. Brist “GaleCrewe” (Minneapolis, MN)

Lois and Günter Hoffman sailed around the world (circumnavigated the globe) over eight years during their retirement. This is the tale of their first voyage from France to California. Lois is a personable, thoughtful, and observant narrator. She is a master weaver of the details and moments that made their journey one of immeasurable bliss.

However, Lois and Günter are honest about the hardships. “Cruising” is almost a misnomer. Sailing carries with it idealistic notions of calm seas and cozy days in the sun. But sailing around the world is not for the faint of heart. It is a mixed bag of good times and bad times. Rough seas and dangerous gales, unbearable heat and inhospitable harbors–contrast with evening sundowners, moments of solitude and camraderie, and delightful local color and history. In the end, Lois and Günter felt that the good times outweighed the hardships. But many cruisers come to the opposite conclusion.
Gorgeous and telling color photos illustrate almost every page of the book. Also included are regular informational boxes–detailing the history, flag, local items of interest for the region at hand, such as Morocco, Guatamela, and El Salvador. For readers unfamiliar with nautical terms, Appendixes A-D are helpful and can be found in the back of the book: Glossary, Beaufort Scale of Sea States, Points of Sale, and the Physics of Sailing.

Lois’ story truly shines when she speaks of the local cultures, the food, the scenery, and the emotional highs adventure and risk can bring. The life-meaning she has drawn from her experiences light up every page. Her raw feelings of stress, anger at difficult situations, and frustration with life being so out of control on the seas are not censored, but rather, tempered by time and wisdom. She has come to realize as she says in the moving last chapter of Maiden Voyage, “There is a certain peace in being out of control. It reminds one of how much there is to lose and how fast one can lose it…Our own journey has become a part of us, and Pacific Bliss has become our trusted friend and family member. Günter and I brought back with us a vision of a wider world, a world where values matter and differences don’t. With it came a new understanding and appreciation of cruising’s highs and lows, and indelible memories of the characters we met along the way.”

I highly recommend this book for anyone longing to leave their mundane life, and travel somewhere else, even if only vicariously. Highlights for me were chapters about Morocco, the Atlantic Crossing, the Kuna Indians of the San Blas Islands, and the trek through Costa Rica, as well as the final chapter, “Re-entering and re-evaluating our lives,” which will be meaningful to anyone who has traveled abroad for an extended period and has felt the pangs of disorientation that comes with returning home.
Read this book and pass it around! You never know, maybe you may be inspired to choose a life of adventure as well!

Contact Lois 

Lois Joy Hofmann 858-333-1946

 sailorstales@gmail.com