A review by scurvycur
The Beast of Cretacea by Todd Strasser

3.0

Okay, so.

This book started out so grand, then fell apart the last 20 pages and I was racing through it to finish it (because of that reason; I had been taking my time with this book).

This book is a retelling of Moby Dick (which I have not read). I thought "Hey, I'll give this a try and see how it goes". Well, it went. And at the end it went very poorly.

SpoilerIshmael wakes up on the Pequod with a few other young people and has gone on this voyage to help his foster family out. You can make big bucks searching for and catching big water game. So, Ishmael, our protagonist and hero, goes out into this new world called Cretacea to try and catch fish and other sea life. His captain, Ahab, is searching for the biggest terrafin of them all and it's all about revenge for him. There are islanders, pirates, mean crewmen of the Pequod, and a very mean terrafin.

I wasn't pleased with this book totally because where was the terrafin? We had a couple good chapters about chasing down the dreaded terrafin and capturing it, which is the point of Moby Dick, right? But there was so much other stuff going on that I feel that, again, this should not have been based off of the book. There were all of the things I mentioned up there ^, a lot of capturing and rescuing. But there wasn't a lot of terrafin. The fight at the end was just kind of sad. Ishmael and his crewmates (and Tarnmoor, the old man who is blind but mysteriously disappears in the end? Where did he go) watch the horrors instead of being involved in them. Which I guess is good, because everyone dies.

The middle of the book has the crew off the ship and on an island (which is to teach us that people can be good and take care of the environment, good job) and there were a lot of pirates, bargaining, SECRETS, and escaping death. Nothing to do with the terrafin (although, the islanders are farming them and keeping them there as a secret, but that really has nothing to do with the purpose of this book - the BEAST of Cretacea).

I also felt like certain passages were set up only to be completely ignored for another hundred pages. We know there's something special about Ishmael, but we don't learn about it until 85% of the book is done. By this time, our brains have probably figured out what is going on (that he is of the Gilded like Pip). Also, what IS the Gilded? What is their PURPOSE? We didn't learn that until the very last two chapters of the book. By this time I was very irritated with it all.

I feel like our author only took the chance to retell Moby Dick so he could commandeer the old story and tell his own story about conservation. Why didn't he just write a book about conserving the environment? Why did he have to take this book and turn it into a lesson, which, by the way, I did NOT like having shoved in my face at the end? I'm a good person, and a lot of people are pretty good and not nefarious; so WHY prove to us that the Earth is dying and it's all because of humans? We get it.

That was a major pet peeve.

Also, TIME TRAVEL. Which in itself is very, very confusing to me at times. You'll find out when you read this book.


In all, this book was written quite well but some of the subjects within can leave a sour taste in your mouth if you aren't paying attention.