A Clock with No Hands

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ABOUT ME
A true fan of creative inspiration [mostly as it relates to water].

ABOUT THE TITLE
I'm "hard to read like a clock with no hands" . . . .

MANTRA
Tide & time wait for no one.


Bunker Spreckels Book Trailer

For my birthday a last year I bought myself the Bunker Spreckels book from Mollusk NYC. Insane surfer, interesting character and back-story, great interview and even better photos (mostly shot by the great Art Brewer). I never knew there was a trailer for the book until today. Hopefully one day they’ll make a movie about this guy …



Product Description
The libertine: The wild, brief life of a surfing legend and international playboy

The tale of Bunker Spreckels (1949-1977) reads like a pitch for a movie to rival Boogie Nights: The stepson of Clark Gable is a privileged Los Angeles party boy who is heir to a multimillion dollar fortune; passionate about surfing, martial arts, guns, and women, he lives the life of a debauched international jet-setter before succumbing to his excesses at the tender age of 27.

Born Adolph B. Spreckels III, heir to the Spreckels sugar fortune, Bunker became a famous surfer as a teenager, but after his inheritance came along, he began to slip into a life of pomp and excess where surfing took a back seat to drugs, sex, and wild road trips. So remarkable was his lifestyle that he created an alter-ego who invited photographers and documentarians to trail him, piecing together a tell-all epic of his own rise to fame and fortune. Before the project, known as “The Player”, could be completed, Spreckels suddenly died.

From the Publisher
Thirty years later, photographer Art Brewer and writer/photojournalist C. R. Stecyk III (of Dogtown and Z-Boys fame) have come together to make this book, which traces the meteoric rise and dramatic fall of Bunker Spreckels. Brewer was a close friend of Spreckels and his personal photographer throughout the last decade of his life, traveling with him from Hawaii to Los Angeles to South Africa. His images of Spreckels, both on the waves and on land, chronicle Spreckels’s metamorphosis from hippie surfer to international playboy, while Stecyk’s extensive taped interview of Spreckels, completed just three months before his death, provides a rare first-person perspective on his decadent life.