Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Moby-Dick inspires enthralling look at whales
AP PHOTO Enlarge Image
A minke whale's head breaks the surface of the water as it swims in the Southern Ocean Sanctuary off Antarctica.
The Whale
In Search of the Giants of the Sea
By Philip Hoare
HarperCollins, 464 pages, $36
This British non-fiction book is a stunning tribute to Herman Melville's classic novel Moby-Dick, but it is also a stand-alone work of art -- a brilliant, ground-breaking and altogether enthralling study of whales and whaling history.
It is, in addition, generously replete with illustrations and sketches of everything cetological, from 19th-century whale fossils and museum exhibits to contemporary photographs and tooth collections.
Renamed for a North American edition, it was first published in England in 2008 as Leviathan or, The Whale -- the original title of Melville's 1851 novel was Moby-Dick; or, The Whale -- and in 2009 Hoare won the illustrious Samuel Johnson Prize for non-fiction.
This book is Hoare's sixth in an oeuvre primarily concerned with literary biography and the 19th century.
Hoare, also a journalist, proves that he knows both the genre and the century well, as he traces not only Melville's footsteps, but also the American abolitionist Frederick Douglass's, through New England's whaling towns in the decade before the Civil War.
These men and these places permit Hoare to see the history of 19th-century whaling and slavery in the same light: as industries cruel and doomed in their "reliance on unsustainable resources, human and cetacean."
This is a lesson for the present too, of course, and Hoare takes us into the geopolitical world of 20th- and 21st-century whaling and to the brink of the species' extinction.
Throughout these chapters, however, he is remarkable in his ability to withhold reproach or vitriol, sustaining instead his warmth for the creatures themselves and his own richly historical vision.
For more than 400 pages, Hoare navigates and organizes oceanic depths of observations about whales. Sustaining a suspenseful pacing of the information, he can open a discussion with, for instance, a scientific anecdote about whale migration patterns and end it with an exploration of legends surrounding sperm whales swallowing people.
The entire book is arranged this way, looping fact and fiction into a profound fascination for what he calls "these charismatic megafauna."
Hoare's central organizing principle, the thing he returns to again and again, is the mystery surrounding the cetacean family to whom Moby-Dick himself belongs, the sperm whale.
In one superlative after another, Hoare addresses the species' enigmatic grandeur: the "biggest brain of any creature ever alive"; the "most complex social structure of any animal other than man"; the "largest sound system of any animal."
In addition, there's something compelling in their remoteness. As Hoare repeatedly reminds us, it is impossible to get a complete picture of these incomparable mammals because they travel so far and dive so deep, deeper than any other whale species.
And, like all whales, they cannot be studied alive outside of their own element.
Toward the end of the book, Hoare's suspenseful pacing increases as he moves into this assertion about sperm whales: "I write about animals I have never seen."
And then he opens the last chapter with a description of diving into the darkness of the Atlantic and approaching "something so huge I could not see it."
It's a brilliant culmination of his commitment both to his passion for these whales and to the philosophical vision of early 20th-century writer Henry Beston, whom he quotes at exactly the midpoint of his study:
"We need another and a wiser and perhaps a more mystical concept of animals.... They are not brethren, they are not underlings; they are other nations."
Dana Medoro is a professor of American literature at the University of Manitoba.
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition February 6, 2010 H8
- Rate this

-
-
We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high. If you thought it was well written, do the same. If it doesn’t meet your standards, mark it accordingly.
You can also register and/or login to the site and join the conversation by leaving a comment.
Rate it yourself by rolling over the stars and clicking when you reach your desired rating. We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high.
The comment period for this story has ended.
Ads by Google
- Back to Top
- Return to Books
-
CON >< CUSSIONS
Examining hockey head injuries
-
Random Acts of Kindness
Your encounters with goodness
-
Open Secrets
Red River students mine government data banks
-
Miss Lonelyhearts
Maureen Scurfield offers life advice
-
Working in Winnipeg
A close-up look at the jobs people do and why they do them
Poll
Most Popular
- Winnipeg Sun editor charged with child pornography
- Arrest warrant issued for 'Laughing Girl'
- Should the province spend $3.1 million to keep Greyhound inter-city bus service in Manitoba?
- Burning question over dead wood
- Meth-ring charges should be dropped: former Bomber
- Porn actress Joslyn James releases sexually graphic messages she says came from Tiger Woods
- Move, then be quiet about cash
- Winnipeg man faces new charges in child-porn case
- Teens urged to 'pee in a cup'
- Police: Arrest made in case of racial comment made over announcement system at US Walmart
- She's not laughing anymore
- Crusader up for Nobel Prize
- Mild again, but enjoy it while it lasts
- Freedom for Li expected
- Winnipeg Sun editor charged with child pornography
- Gesturing rudely at OPP while in possession of stolen goods: not a good idea
- Man shot after chasing car thieves
- Off-duty officer stops assault on Transit driver
- Grand Forks declares flood emergency
- New cutting machine breaks through ice near Selkirk
- Olympic-sized hypocrisy
- Crusader up for Nobel Prize
- Teacher's lapdance caught on tape, watched by world
- Students could be punished
- Not wrong, just illegal
- Second video of lap dance uncovered
- Mr. Matas a worthy nominee
- She's not laughing anymore
- What should happen to two teachers who performed a sexually suggestive dance routine in front of students?
- Oprah's on, and so is our Jon!
- Province gives Greyhound $3M
- Ottawa will pay to airlift supplies to reserves caught short by early winter-road melt
- Burning question over dead wood
- Missing BlackBerry held priceless memories
- Don't seek mom's approval when you're making plans
- Beefed-up kindergarten shelved
- Stone Temple Pilots headline Rock on the Range
- Border agency looks at giving guns to airport officers
- Move, then be quiet about cash
- Convicted Somali refugee ordered deported last fall arrested in Winnipeg
- She's not laughing anymore
- Freedom for Li expected
- Man shot after chasing car thieves
- City may open diamond lanes to more users
- He can escape her verbal abuse
- Gesturing rudely at OPP while in possession of stolen goods: not a good idea
- Play nice in your neighbour's dust
- Liberals say cutting MP mailings would save $10 million a year
- Eagles, Dixie Chicks to play stadium in June
- Charges considered in machete attack
- Teacher's lapdance caught on tape, watched by world
- She's not laughing anymore
- Students could be punished
- Police shoot and kill suspect
- Freedom for Li expected
- Second video of lap dance uncovered
- Wielding a weapon costs a life
- Mounties hook ice-fishers for open beer
- More ominous issue underlies Youth for Christ flap
- Canadian women's hockey team stunned by reaction to post-gold party
- Winnipeg Sun editor charged with child pornography
- Price soldiers on despite woes for manufacturing industry
- Province's credit unions oblivious to downturn
- Rice of the Prairies gets raves
- Oak Park snares second title Raiders rule in women's high school hockey
- Giant Wal-Mart's footstep feared
- Police: Arrest made in case of racial comment made over announcement system at US Walmart
- Wesmen varsity girls enjoy rebound season
- Puerto Rico oversees production of 'super yuca', aims to feed the hungry in Africa
- Seek out stellar sushi between grocery aisles
- Eagles, Dixie Chicks to play stadium in June
- Condos at ex-Penthouse
- Grand Forks declares flood emergency
- New cutting machine breaks through ice near Selkirk
- It's the Sharks vs. the Jets in a jazzy rumble
- Man shot after chasing car thieves
- Former prosecutor ambushed on CBC
- Is jet a trophy or just bad PR?
- Career Compass helps staff chart career paths
- Ice-cutting machine to stay submerged until spring
- Text of Shane Koyczan's opening ceremonies poem, "We Are More"
- Teacher's lapdance caught on tape, watched by world
- Olympic-sized hypocrisy
- Cabela's to open across Canada
- Oprah's on, and so is our Jon!
- Not wrong, just illegal
- Online drug pioneer tumbles
- Mounties hook ice-fishers for open beer
- No listings for buyers flooding the housing market
- Second video of lap dance uncovered
PREVIOUS

0 Comments