I have made two strip built boats. The scull boat I showed pics of two years ago and a canoe a few years before.
Hardest part of building them is laying out the form, call lofting. You start with a table of offsets, which after a few years of geometry one would think it would make sense, but it didn't for me. Each time I had to plot the points in Excel to understand how the tables work. Once the forms are made, the rest goes easy.
For the canoe, I bought good cedar (waste of money), for the scull boat, I used 5/4 cedar decking. Had to work around some knots, but for the price it worked great. Spent alot of time ripping and routering, then once they were all glue together around the forms, took some time to plane everything smooth. Notice I sand plane, goes much faster, and cleaner than sanding. Oh, I should point out, you can only glue up a few pieces each day, bunge cords seemed to make the best clamps and you have to do some tweaking around the compound curves.
Then glass the outside, fill the weave, sand smooth and flip over remove the forms and repeat.
I sold the scull last year, while I wasn't crazy about the size (two man and a little too big), I will definitely build a another scull boat and it will be strip planked.
Oh, the book I used for the canoe was called Canoe Craft. Great book with alot of pics, have it laying around here somewhere, if you want to borrow it, let me know.