Biography—

Randall Peffer is the author of over 300 travel-lifestyle features for magazines like National Geographic, National Geographic Traveler, Smithsonian, Reader's Digest, Travel Holiday, Islands and Sail. In fact, Sail alone has published more than 35 of his features. In addition, his travel features syndicate in most of the US major metro dailies like the New York Times, Washington Post, Miami Herald, Boston Globe, San Francisco Examiner, Denver Post and Chicago Tribune.

Randy established himself as a maritime writer with his first book, Watermen, a documentary of the lives of the Chesapeake's fishermen. It won the Baltimore Sun's Critic's Choice award and is now in its third paperback edition.

Randy has published travel guides about New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C. and the Capital Region and Savannah, Charleston and the Carolina Coast. He has also authored Lonely Planet's guide to Puerto Rico, LP's Virgin Islands guide and their New England guide.

Intrigue Press published his first novel, an edgy murder mystery called Killing Neptune’s Daughter, in May of 2004. His second novel, Provincetown Follies, Bangkok Blues was published in 2006. In the spring of 2008 Bleak House Books published his third novel, Old School Bones.

The son of a career naval officer, and a working mariner on traditional sailing vessels since the age of 20, Randy brings an intimate knowledge of the naval life and windships to his writing. Over the course of 35 years at sea he has served as deckhand and mate aboard a 100-year-old Chesapeake Bay skipjack, a cargo schooner, a cod longliner, a swordfishermen and a research vessel.

Randy has been active in the American Sail Training Association. Working as the licensed captain of Phillips Academy/Andover's research schooner Sarah Abbot, he has carried biology students on research cruises of the southern New England coast and sailed the schooner from eastern Maine to the Southern Bahamas. The story of one such summer has become a literary memoir that not only evokes the natural drama of life aboard a traditional working vessel, but also uncovers the considerable history of coastal New England.

This book, called Logs of the Dead Pirates Society, was published by Sheridan House in June of 2000, receiving uniformly positive reviews in places like The Boston Globe, Library Journal and all major nautical publications. Sail magazine featured an excerpt of this book in their January, 2000, 30th Anniversary issue. Excerpts have also appeared in The Captain's Guide to Cape Cod 2001 and the 2002 edition of the American Sail Training Association Directory. Randy has given more than 45 readings, lectures and signings to promote the book, and he continues to make public appearance on behalf of the book at yacht clubs, maritime museums and tall ship festivals.

He teaches literature and writing at Phillips Academy/Andover.