Reviews

The Whale: In Search of the Giants of the Sea by Philip Hoare

duncbell's review against another edition

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4.0

4.5 Much of it framed by Moby Dick and Herman Melville. There's still an enormous world of whales and their doomed relationship with humans in this book. The author's own narrative is sparse but beautifully written and I wished for more of it, but perhaps it was well judged. The final chapter felt like a perfect coda to this complicated history of violence and butchery.

faegirl's review

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2.0

Really thought I would be learning about whales instead of rehashing Moby Dick (which is a horrid book).

mbivy's review against another edition

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adventurous dark emotional informative mysterious reflective sad slow-paced

3.5

I’m not normally a non-fiction reader. The info on the history of whaling was very interesting, but I often found the writing to be verbose. 

joelanichols's review

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2.0

kind of boring for such a fascinating subject because it's a lot of Hoare's ruminations about how magnificent and awesome whales are. But all that crap writing aside, this book is totally worth it for Hoare's steamy rehashing of Melville's totally pervy homoerotic whaling adventures and how he used them to seduce Hawthorne.

busco's review against another edition

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informative relaxing sad medium-paced

4.25

fabydemar's review against another edition

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4.0

"Ambasciatrici internazionali del potere indiscriminato della natura, le balene sono nazioni senza Stato, dotate di una forza che trascende la mera presenza fisica."
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Che piaccia oppure no, la conoscenza che abbiamo delle balene e, più in generale, dei cetacei è legata alla spietata caccia di cui questi enormi mammiferi marini sono stati oggetto nei secoli passati. Interi capitali e fortune economiche sono stati fondati sull'industria baleniera, a partire dagli avamposti costieri di Cape Cod e Nantucket.
Questo libro, devo dirlo, mi ha lasciato con un nodo in gola per il triste destino a cui sono stati condannati migliaia e migliaia di balene franche e capodogli
E la storia non è ancora finita: è notizia di appena un mese fa che il Giappone ha deciso di mettere fine alla moratoria e di riprendere la caccia alle balene (millantando scopi scientifici, pure!). Quale mercato abbiano nel 2019 fanoni, denti e olio di balena non è dato sapere, considerato anche che la carne di balena non viene più consumata.
La storia per questi giganti buoni per ora continua, mentre ci rendiamo sempre più conto che oltre essere minacciati dalla caccia, questi abitanti delle profondità oceaniche sono minacciati anche dall'inquinamento, dalla plastica e dalle reti da pesca delle intense attività antropiche.
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"Mentre la balena mi sfilava davanti, vidi il suo occhio: grigio, velato, senziente, disposto lateralmente, centro della sua coscienza. Dietro, tutto il resto era muscolo, che si muoveva senza sforzo. Quel momento durò per sempre, un'eternità di pochi secondi. Entrambi nella nostra nuda interezza, separati soltanto dall'oceano sconfinato."

achillesheeled's review against another edition

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4.0

Like Melville writing about Nantucket, an island he had never visited, I write about animals I have never seen, for all that I can smell them and handle their most intimate secrets. The closer I get, the further away they seem; and the more I learn, the less I know about these strange cetaceans, mammals like us, yet so separated in scale in our microcosms of greater unknowns, from the sea to infinity.

4.5
obligatory disclaimer that you should probably only read this book if youve also read moby dick, as it relies on it heavily; however, i love moby dick so i really liked this. theres some really striking writing at times

kzizz's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective slow-paced

5.0

Not like any non-fiction I’d read before. So poetically written and informative at the same time. A fascinating examination of both how whales have impacted human culture over the centuries - as well as the inverse . 

cyluho's review against another edition

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informative reflective sad medium-paced

4.0

Very interesting and intriguing examination of human-whale relationship throughout the years. Re-awakened my love for whales and also made me really angry and sad.
The way the author tried to tie in his own life seemed a bit random and out of place at times. There were some very confusing jumps in the storytelling ocassionally.

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lilimei's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective sad slow-paced

4.75