Synopses & Reviews
From the New York Times bestselling author of Evidence of Harm and Animal Factory—a groundbreaking scientific thriller that exposes the dark side of SeaWorld, Americas most beloved marine mammal park Death at SeaWorld centers on the battle with the multimillion-dollar marine park industry over the controversial and even lethal ramifications of keeping killer whales in captivity. Following the story of marine biologist and animal advocate at the Humane Society of the US, Naomi Rose, Kirby tells the gripping story of the two-decade fight against PR-savvy SeaWorld, which came to a head with the tragic death of trainer Dawn Brancheau in 2010. Kirby puts that horrific animal-on-human attack in context. Brancheaus death was the most publicized among several brutal attacks that have occurred at Sea World and other marine mammal theme parks. Death at SeaWorld introduces real people taking part in this debate, from former trainers turned animal rights activists to the men and women that champion SeaWorld and the captivity of whales. In section two the orcas act out. And as the story progresses and orca attacks on trainers become increasingly violent, the warnings of Naomi Rose and other scientists fall on deaf ears, only to be realized with the death of Dawn Brancheau. Finally he covers the media backlash, the eyewitnesses who come forward to challenge SeaWorlds glossy image, and the groundbreaking OSHA case that challenges the very idea of keeping killer whales in captivity and may spell the end of having trainers in the water with the oceans top predators. For more on the subject, watch Blackfish, a major motion picture from Magnolia Pictures and CNN Films.
Review
“Killer whales, like chimpanzees, are highly intelligent and intensely social creatures, forming close emotional bonds between family and group members. I have watched them leap in the freedom of the ocean and feel deeply saddened and angered to see them in cruel captivity, swimming endlessly and hopelessly around their sterile concrete prisons. As David Kirby so eloquently documents in this timely work, killer-whale captivity only benefits the captors. It is impossible to read Death at SeaWorld and come to any other conclusion.” ---Jane Goodall, Ph.D., D.B.E., Founder, the Jane Goodall Institute, UN Messenger of Peace
“This is one helluva book! David Kirby provides the most complete and accurate account of what I perceive as a transgression of morality toward the animal kingdom---the slavery of orcas, supreme beings in the aquatic world. And he personalizes it for us. Many of us have a deep appreciation of, and a deep compassion for, animals; and those whose favorite animals are killer whales are perhaps at the deepest end of the spectrum. Maybe someday Death at SeaWorld will be translated into whale-speak and broadcast throughout the oceans, seeking forgiveness. Until then, our actions must speak for ourselves.” ---Ken Balcomb, Director, Center for Whale Research
“It is sad that this book had to be inspired by the death of trainer Dawn Brancheau in 2010, but David Kirby has revealed the true heart of this fascinating story of the killer whale, the largest of the dolphins. Accurately, passionately, lovingly and unapologetically, he tells the orcas story, but we also meet the humans who have captured them, studied them, trained them, exhibited them, and tried to understand what the author calls (after humans), “the most socially and ecologically complex animals on earth.” This remarkable book deserves to be acknowledged as the most significant and moving account of the often disastrous interaction of cetaceans and humans since Moby-Dick.”--Richard Ellis, author of Men and Whales, The Empty Ocean, and The Great Sperm Whale
"Entertaining, engaging and enraging - The fairy tale fantasy that the captivity marine mammal industry has spun for the unwary public is expertly unraveled in this non-fiction crime thriller. You cant make this stuff up. Animal advocate Naomi Rose, who has lived in the wild with killer whales, is the real-life heroine in the battle against the tragedy known as the captive dolphin industry. A killer whale, never known to seriously attack a human in the wild, more social than we, with a brain much larger than ours, is captured, torn from his mother in Iceland and forced to do tricks for tourists in Florida. The unnatural existence turns him into a serial killer." -- Louie Psihoyos, Academy Award winning director of The Cove
“This book takes you where most have never been before - inside the nightmare world of the marine mammal captivity industry. David Kirbys research is impeccable and his words unforgettable. You will never view dolphin and orca shows the same way again.”- Lori Marino, PhD, Senior Lecturer in Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology, Emory University
“Death at SeaWorld is one of the most important books, if not the most important book, ever written on the horrific plight of captive cetaceans. Focusing on killer whales, the well-known black-and-white icons of life in the sea, David Kirby systematically dismantles the arguments used to justify keeping these incredibly intelligent and sentient beings in the aquatic cagesin which they're jammed .”--Marc Bekoff, University of Colorado, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals and The Animal Manifesto: Six Reasons For Expanding Our Compassion Footprint
“In this authoritative and superbly investigative page-turner, certain to ruffle feathers and fins, David Kirby traces the tale of scientist-conservationist Naomi Rose pitted against SeaWorld bent on turning a charismatic, intelligent, big-toothed predator — the killer whale, or orca — into its corporate brand. Kirby reports brilliantly on the escalating troubles and conflicts, the surprising and sordid underbelly of life — and death — at SeaWorld.”— Erich Hoyt, author of the best-selling classic Orca: The Whale Called Killer and Research Fellow, Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society
"This is a book everyone should read.. . .. David Kirby's Death at SeaWorld outlines in grim detail just how bad captivity is for orcas and other marine mammals."-- Richard O'Barry, Director of Earth Island Institute's Dolphin Project and star of the Academy Award-winning documentary, The Cove
“Death at SeaWorld will become one of the most pivotal books in the orca captivity debate for years to come, and may well be the catalyst we have all been waiting for towards seeing an end to this cruelty. At last, both sides of the story behind the events at SeaWorld are being told and the truth is finally getting out there. Every budding orca trainer should consider this the must-read book of their career.”--Dr. Ingrid N. Visser, Founder & Principal Scientist, Orca Research Trust
Review
"A gripping inspection of the biggest keeper of killer whales...hard to put down." --Booklist (starred review)
“Killer whales, like chimpanzees, are highly intelligent and intensely social creatures, forming close emotional bonds between family and group members. I have watched them leap in the freedom of the ocean and feel deeply saddened and angered to see them in cruel captivity, swimming endlessly and hopelessly around their sterile concrete prisons. As David Kirby so eloquently documents in this timely work, killer-whale captivity only benefits the captors. It is impossible to read Death at SeaWorld and come to any other conclusion.” ---Jane Goodall, Ph.D., D.B.E., Founder, the Jane Goodall Institute, UN Messenger of Peace
“This is one helluva book! David Kirby provides the most complete and accurate account of what I perceive as a transgression of morality toward the animal kingdom---the slavery of orcas, supreme beings in the aquatic world. And he personalizes it for us. Many of us have a deep appreciation of, and a deep compassion for, animals; and those whose favorite animals are killer whales are perhaps at the deepest end of the spectrum. Maybe someday Death at SeaWorld will be translated into whale-speak and broadcast throughout the oceans, seeking forgiveness. Until then, our actions must speak for ourselves.” ---Ken Balcomb, Director, Center for Whale Research
“It is sad that this book had to be inspired by the death of trainer Dawn Brancheau in 2010, but David Kirby has revealed the true heart of this fascinating story of the killer whale, the largest of the dolphins. Accurately, passionately, lovingly and unapologetically, he tells the orcas story, but we also meet the humans who have captured them, studied them, trained them, exhibited them, and tried to understand what the author calls (after humans), “the most socially and ecologically complex animals on earth.” This remarkable book deserves to be acknowledged as the most significant and moving account of the often disastrous interaction of cetaceans and humans since Moby-Dick.”--Richard Ellis, author of Men and Whales, The Empty Ocean, and The Great Sperm Whale
"Entertaining, engaging and enraging - The fairy tale fantasy that the captivity marine mammal industry has spun for the unwary public is expertly unraveled in this non-fiction crime thriller. You cant make this stuff up. Animal advocate Naomi Rose, who has lived in the wild with killer whales, is the real-life heroine in the battle against the tragedy known as the captive dolphin industry. A killer whale, never known to seriously attack a human in the wild, more social than we, with a brain much larger than ours, is captured, torn from his mother in Iceland and forced to do tricks for tourists in Florida. The unnatural existence turns him into a serial killer." -- Louie Psihoyos, Academy Award winning director of The Cove
“This book takes you where most have never been before - inside the nightmare world of the marine mammal captivity industry. David Kirbys research is impeccable and his words unforgettable. You will never view dolphin and orca shows the same way again.”- Lori Marino, PhD, Senior Lecturer in Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology, Emory University
“Death at SeaWorld is one of the most important books, if not the most important book, ever written on the horrific plight of captive cetaceans. Focusing on killer whales, the well-known black-and-white icons of life in the sea, David Kirby systematically dismantles the arguments used to justify keeping these incredibly intelligent and sentient beings in the aquatic cagesin which they're jammed .”--Marc Bekoff, University of Colorado, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals and The Animal Manifesto: Six Reasons For Expanding Our Compassion Footprint
“In this authoritative and superbly investigative page-turner, certain to ruffle feathers and fins, David Kirby traces the tale of scientist-conservationist Naomi Rose pitted against SeaWorld bent on turning a charismatic, intelligent, big-toothed predator — the killer whale, or orca — into its corporate brand. Kirby reports brilliantly on the escalating troubles and conflicts, the surprising and sordid underbelly of life — and death — at SeaWorld.”— Erich Hoyt, author of the best-selling classic Orca: The Whale Called Killer and Research Fellow, Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society
"This is a book everyone should read.. . .. David Kirby's Death at SeaWorld outlines in grim detail just how bad captivity is for orcas and other marine mammals."-- Richard O'Barry, Director of Earth Island Institute's Dolphin Project and star of the Academy Award-winning documentary, The Cove
“Death at SeaWorld will become one of the most pivotal books in the orca captivity debate for years to come, and may well be the catalyst we have all been waiting for towards seeing an end to this cruelty. At last, both sides of the story behind the events at SeaWorld are being told and the truth is finally getting out there. Every budding orca trainer should consider this the must-read book of their career.”--Dr. Ingrid N. Visser, Founder & Principal Scientist, Orca Research Trust
Review
“A gripping investigation… Hard to put down.”
Booklist (***Starred Review)
One of the “great books” of the summer
- The Columbus Dispatch
#1 Readers Poll Choice for Summer Books
- Wall Street Journal Online
“One of the summers most anticipated new releases”
-- Apple I-Bookstore
“A masterful work.”
--Seattle Post Intelligencer
“Lives are at stake here, and Kirby can be trusted to tell the story, having won a passel of awards for his investigative work.”
-- Library Journal
“Kirby's knockout format is articulate and mind-blowing. This riveting read is not one that will easily be dismissed.”
--Digital Journal
“Journalist Kirby offers another passionate industry exposé … the narrative goes into high gear with its concluding confrontation.”
-- Publishers Weekly
“Kirby places this much-publicized tragic incident within the context of decades of warnings by marine biologists and animal advocates about the risks of keeping these giant predators in captivity. A real-life scientific thriller.”
-- Barnes and Noble
“As David Kirby so eloquently documents in this timely work, killer-whale captivity only benefits the captors. It is impossible to read ‘Death at SeaWorld and come to any other conclusion.”
--Jane Goodall, Ph.D., D.B.E., Founder, the Jane Goodall Institute, UN Messenger of Peace
"Entertaining, engaging and enraging - The fairy tale fantasy that the captivity marine mammal industry has spun for the unwary public is expertly unraveled in this non-fiction crime thriller."
-- Louie Psihoyos, Academy Award winning director of The Cove
“Even if you're not an animal nut like me, David Kirby's Death at Sea World is a fascinating book.” - Sam Simon, Co-Creator, “The Simpsons,”and leading animal rights activist
“In this authoritative and superbly investigative page-turner, certain to ruffle feathers and fins, David Kirby … reports brilliantly on the escalating troubles and conflicts, the surprising and sordid underbelly of life — and death — at SeaWorld.”
-- Erich Hoyt, author of the best-selling classic Orca: The Whale Called Killer
“Death at SeaWorld is one of the most important books, if not the most important book, ever written on the horrific plight of captive cetaceans. Kirby systematically dismantles the arguments used to justify keeping these incredibly intelligent and sentient beings in aquatic cages.
-- Marc Bekoff, University of Colorado, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals
"This is a book everyone should read… David Kirby's ‘Death at SeaWorld outlines in grim detail just how bad captivity is for orcas and other marine mammals."
-- Richard O'Barry, Director of Earth Island Institute's Dolphin Project and star of The Cove
“At last, both sides of the story behind the events at SeaWorld are being told and the truth is finally getting out there. Every budding orca trainer should consider this the must-read book of their career.”
--Dr. Ingrid N. Visser, Founder & Principal Scientist, Orca Research Trust
“One helluva book! David Kirby provides the most complete and accurate account of what I perceive as a transgression of morality toward the animal kingdom---the slavery of orcas, supreme beings in the aquatic world.”
--Ken Balcomb, Director, Center for Whale Research
“David Kirbys research is impeccable and his words unforgettable. You will never view dolphin and orca shows the same way again.”
- Lori Marino, PhD, Senior Lecturer in Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology, Emory University
“This remarkable book deserves to be acknowledged as the most significant and moving account of the often disastrous interaction of cetaceans and humans since Moby-Dick.”
--Richard Ellis, author of Men and Whales, The Empty Ocean, and The Great Sperm Whale
Review
“Should some of the most social, intelligent and charismatic animals on the planet be kept in captivity by human beings? That is a question asked more frequently than ever by both scientists and animal welfare advocates…Now the issue has been raised with new intensity in Death at SeaWorld by David Kirby, just released in paperback.” —The New York Times
“Kirby makes a passionate case for captivity as the reason orcas become killers (and) tells the story like a thriller. His argument is, for the most part, fair and persuasive… We probably can't free the orcas in captivity today, but we could make the current group of captive killer whales the last.”
--Wall Street Journal
“A chilling depiction… Kirby lays out a compelling scientific argument against killer whale captivity”-New Scientist
“A gripping inspection… Hard to put down.”--Booklist (***Starred Review)
“Brilliantly and intensively researched and conveyed with clarity and thoughtfulness, Kirbys work of high-quality non-fiction busts the whale debate wide open… Reads like a thriller and horrifies like Hannibal Lector.” —San Francisco Book Review - FIVE STARS
“Kirby says people do not realize that whales often live with the same pod from birth and that when marine parks take them from their pods they are separated from their families… The killer whales then, in some instances, take out those emotions on other whales, which doesn't happen in the wild as much.” - CBS This Morning
Thanks to investigative journalist David Kirby, we are now equipped to consider (attacks in captivity) in context. His book is packed with facts about killer whales and the stress caused by keeping them in captivity and asking them to perform for humans. - NPR.org
“Nature has a way of biting back. The true story told in the 2012 scientific thriller Death at SeaWorld exposes the dark side of America's most beloved marine mammal park. From the tragic death of trainer Dawn Brancheau in 2010 to other less-publicized incidents, the book chronicles the perils of attempting to subdue the species.” - Al Jazeera
“David Kirby, author of ‘Death at SeaWorld: Shamu and the Dark Side of Killer Whales in Captivity, has posted a persuasive rebuttal. SeaWorld as much as self-indicts its orca practices as indefensible.” -- Chicago Sun Times
"Death at SeaWorld dismantles the carefully crafted industry myth of animals who are content to live in small tanks and perform tricks for spectators" —All Animals Magazine
David Kirby, whose recent book ‘Death at SeaWorld traces the history of killer whales in captivity, found that Tilikum was captured off Iceland in the early 1980s when just two years old. He was kept in a tiny covered pool for two years before being sold to a marine park in Canada which closed after he drowned a trainer. Kirby says Tilikum is a very disturbed and dangerous animal. - Sunday Times (UK)
Recent publications like David Kirbys ‘Death at Sea World are increasing recognition of the great wrong being done to the mind in the waters by continuing live captures and captive breeding of orcas. Some orcas in captivity do attack and kill or injure their captors. Tilikum, once captive at the former Sealand in Oak Bay, has killed three people.” - Victoria (BC) Times Colonist
"Death at SeaWorld by David Kirby was just released in paperback. (It) tells a story of intelligent animals that, while often friendly to humans, nevertheless carry with them what some argue is inevitable psychological damage due to captivity.” - Nature World News
“Detailed and thorough…Kirby writes objectively, and with a clear vision when discussing the history of killer whales in captivity. He also shows how SeaWorld is a microcosm where smiles are required.” -- Metro Montreal
“Death at SeaWorld, a 2012 exposé by David Kirby, is a comprehensive account starting from when the first orca was captured up until 2012, when OSHA hit SeaWorld with safety violations. It has helped change and educate the public about orcas in captivity.” - The Manitoban
“Kirby shows that the reality (of orca captivity) is more akin to a circus, in which any benefits are outweighed by the cost to the whale - and sometimes to the keepers.” —Financial Times
“Thorough and disturbing… One of the great books of the summer” -Columbus Dispatch
“SeaWorld got a firm slap in the form of journalist David Kirby's fascinating and deeply disturbing book.” --Christian Science Monitor
“An outstanding book… very-well written, extremely well documented, and timely.”--Psychology Today
#1 Readers Poll Choice for Summer Books -Wall Street Journal Online
“An informed narrative that strongly suggests that despite their name, only when captured do the mammals become dangerous to humans. Free Willy, indeed.”--New York Daily News
“Kirby has done his homework and does an excellent job of educating the public about orcas in the wild, as well as highlighting the dangers inherent in keeping these highly evolved, intelligent animals in captivity.” --Examiner.com
“A masterful work.”--Seattle Post Intelligencer
“Eye-opening poolside reading… Death isn't supposed to pop up in environments carefully choreographed for family fun.”--San Francisco Bay Guardian
“A real-life scientific thriller.”--Barnes and Noble
“One of the summers most anticipated new releases”-- Apple I-Bookstore
"Well written, well studied so as not to come across as a misinformed or ill-informed journalism (as if we had any doubt), two sided, and done with a lot of emotion to help draw the reader in as if you were reading a murder mystery. Done like a true novelist... Definitely a five star review and a two thumbs up." —Artists On Demand
“A new book examining the dark side of keeping killer whales in captivity has slammed SeaWorld for its treatment of the enormous beasts and for massive safety failings which still haunt the world famous marine parks.”--Daily Mail (UK)
“Fascinating, shocking, even infuriating, but ultimately rewarding… Discover the majesty of killer whales, the inherent cruelty of their captivity and the passion of those who fight for their freedom.”--Shelf Aware, Online Book Reviews
“A page-turning book… a disturbing account that will be hard for SeaWorld to transcend… Kirby makes it horrifyingly clear how serious (captivity) can be for human safety and orca well-being.”--Waynes Blog, Wayne Pacelle, CEO of The Humane Society of the United States
“Even if you're not an animal nut like me, David Kirby's Death at Sea World is a fascinating book.”--Sam Simon, Co-Creator of The Simpsons and leading animal-rights activist
“An exhilarating journalistic achievement—the reporting is singularly deep and wide, the research enormously meticulous, the storytelling as gripping as in a great novel.”--Talking Animals with Duncan Strauss, WMNF-FM, Tampa
“I was sent a pre-release copy and cant put it down… Get a copy of this book. Its about time it was written.”--Fayetteville Observer
“Kirby's knockout format is articulate and mind-blowing. This riveting read is not one that will easily be dismissed.”--Digital Journal
“Lives are at stake here, and Kirby can be trusted to tell the story, having won a passel of awards for his investigative work.” --Library Journal
“Journalist Kirby offers another passionate industry exposé … the narrative goes into high gear with its concluding confrontation.” --Publishers Weekly
“Simply superb… David Kirby has left no stone unturned. He has successfully refuted the arguments put forth by the pro-captivity advocates” -Philosophy Book Review
“Get insight into this excellent story by David Kirby about the human-amusement park's treatment of these animals via his book, Death at SeaWorld” - Sacramento News Review
“Captivity disrupts (orca) behavior in practically every manner. Contrary to marine mammal exhibition industry claims, orca lifespans are significantly shortened in captivity.”-- Animal People Magazine
“I particularly enjoyed this book. It reads very much like a novel to the point when you are staying up later than you should to finish it.”--San Juan Island Update
“The bottom line of these findings is that keeping these magnificent beings in confinement is not a good thing.”--Wild Time Radio TCR-FM (UK)
Review
“Kirby makes a passionate case for captivity as the reason orcas become killers (and) tells the story like a thriller. His argument is, for the most part, fair and persuasive… We probably can't free the orcas in captivity today, but we could make the current group of captive killer whales the last.”
--Wall Street Journal
“A chilling depiction… Kirby lays out a compelling scientific argument against killer whale captivity”-New Scientist
“A gripping inspection… Hard to put down.”--Booklist (***Starred Review)
“Thorough and disturbing… One of the great books of the summer”
-Columbus Dispatch
“SeaWorld got a firm slap in the form of journalist David Kirby's fascinating and deeply disturbing book.”--Christian Science Monitor
“An outstanding book… very-well written, extremely well documented, and timely.”--Psychology Today
#1 Readers Poll Choice for Summer Books -Wall Street Journal Online
“An informed narrative that strongly suggests that despite their name, only when captured do the mammals become dangerous to humans. Free Willy, indeed.”--New York Daily News
“A masterful work.”--Seattle Post Intelligencer
“Eye-opening poolside reading… Death isn't supposed to pop up in environments carefully choreographed for family fun.”--San Francisco Bay Guardian
“Kirby has done his homework and does an excellent job of educating the public about orcas in the wild, as well as highlighting the dangers inherent in keeping these highly evolved, intelligent animals in captivity.”
--Examiner.com
“A real-life scientific thriller.”--Barnes and Noble
“One of the summers most anticipated new releases”-- Apple I-Bookstore
“A new book examining the dark side of keeping killer whales in captivity has slammed SeaWorld for its treatment of the enormous beasts and for massive safety failings which still haunt the world famous marine parks.”--Daily Mail (UK)
“Fascinating, shocking, even infuriating, but ultimately rewarding… Discover the majesty of killer whales, the inherent cruelty of their captivity and the passion of those who fight for their freedom.”--Shelf Aware, Online Book Reviews
“A page-turning book… a disturbing account that will be hard for SeaWorld to transcend… Kirby makes it horrifyingly clear how serious (captivity) can be for human safety and orca well-being.”--Waynes Blog, Wayne Pacelle, CEO of The Humane Society of the United States
“Even if you're not an animal nut like me, David Kirby's Death at Sea World is a fascinating book.”--Sam Simon, Co-Creator of The Simpsons and leading animal-rights activist
“An exhilarating journalistic achievement—the reporting is singularly deep and wide, the research enormously meticulous, the storytelling as gripping as in a great novel.”--Talking Animals with Duncan Strauss, WMNF-FM, Tampa
“I was sent a pre-release copy and cant put it down… Get a copy of this book. Its about time it was written.”--Fayetteville Observer
“Kirby's knockout format is articulate and mind-blowing. This riveting read is not one that will easily be dismissed.”--Digital Journal
“Lives are at stake here, and Kirby can be trusted to tell the story, having won a passel of awards for his investigative work.” --Library Journal
“Journalist Kirby offers another passionate industry exposé … the narrative goes into high gear with its concluding confrontation.” --Publishers Weekly
“Simply superb… David Kirby has left no stone unturned. He has successfully refuted the arguments put forth by the pro-captivity advocates” -Philosophy Book Review
“Captivity disrupts (orca) behavior in practically every manner. Contrary to marine mammal exhibition industry claims, orca lifespans are significantly shortened in captivity.”-- Animal People Magazine
“I particularly enjoyed this book. It reads very much like a novel to the point when you are staying up later than you should to finish it.”--San Juan Island Update
“The bottom line of these findings is that keeping these magnificent beings in confinement is not a good thing.”--Wild Time Radio TCR-FM (UK)
Review
“Kirby makes a passionate case for captivity as the reason orcas become killers (and) tells the story like a thriller… We probably can't free the orcas in captivity today, but we could make the current group of captive killer whales the last.” --Wall Street Journal
“A chilling depiction… Kirby lays out a compelling scientific argument against killer whale captivity”-New Scientist
“A gripping inspection… Hard to put down.”--Booklist (***Starred Review)
“Brilliantly and intensively researched and conveyed with clarity and thoughtfulness, Kirbys work of high-quality non-fiction busts the whale debate wide open… Reads like a thriller and horrifies like Hannibal Lector.” --San Francisco Book Review - FIVE STARS
“Kirby places this much-publicized tragic incident within the context of decades of warnings by marine biologists and animal advocates about the risks of keeping these giant predators in captivity. A real-life scientific thriller.” --Barnes and Noble
“As David Kirby so eloquently documents in this timely work, killer-whale captivity only benefits the captors. It is impossible to read ‘Death at SeaWorld and come to any other conclusion.” - Jane Goodall, Ph.D., D.B.E., Founder, the Jane Goodall Institute, UN Messenger of Peace
"Entertaining, engaging and enraging - The fairy tale fantasy that the captivity marine mammal industry has spun for the unwary public is expertly unraveled in this non-fiction crime thriller." - Louie Psihoyos, Academy Award winning director of The Cove
“In this authoritative and superbly investigative page-turner, certain to ruffle feathers and fins, David Kirby … reports brilliantly on the escalating troubles and conflicts, the surprising and sordid underbelly of life — and death — at SeaWorld.”- Erich Hoyt, author of the best-selling classic Orca: The Whale Called Killer
“Death at SeaWorld is one of the most important books, if not the most important book, ever written on the horrific plight of captive cetaceans. Kirby systematically dismantles the arguments used to justify keeping these incredibly intelligent and sentient beings in aquatic cages. - Marc Bekoff, University of Colorado, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals
"This is a book everyone should read… David Kirby's ‘Death at SeaWorld outlines in grim detail just how bad captivity is for orcas and other marine mammals."- Richard O'Barry, Director of Earth Island Institute's Dolphin Project and star of The Cove
“At last, both sides of the story behind the events at SeaWorld are being told and the truth is finally getting out there. Every budding orca trainer should consider this the must-read book of their career.”
-Dr. Ingrid N. Visser, Founder & Principal Scientist, Orca Research Trust
“One helluva book! David Kirby provides the most complete and accurate account of what I perceive as a transgression of morality toward the animal kingdom---the slavery of orcas, supreme beings in the aquatic world.” -Ken Balcomb, Director, Center for Whale Research
“David Kirbys research is impeccable and his words unforgettable. You will never view dolphin and orca shows the same way again.”- Lori Marino, PhD, Senior Lecturer in Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology, Emory University
“This remarkable book deserves to be acknowledged as the most significant and moving account of the often disastrous interaction of cetaceans and humans since Moby-Dick.”-Richard Ellis, author of Men and Whales, The Empty Ocean, and The Great Sperm Whale
“Kirby shows that the reality (of orca captivity) is more akin to a circus, in which any benefits are outweighed by the cost to the whale - and sometimes to the keepers.”--Financial Times
“Thorough and disturbing… One of the great books of the summer”
-Columbus Dispatch
“SeaWorld got a firm slap in the form of journalist David Kirby's fascinating and deeply disturbing book.”--Christian Science Monitor
“An outstanding book… very-well written, extremely well documented, and timely.”--Psychology Today
#1 Readers Poll Choice for Summer Books -Wall Street Journal Online
“This is a warning-bell book on par with Upton Sinclair's The Jungle or Jessica Mitford's The American Way of Death… After Kirby's brutal and ground-breaking work, we can't say we weren't warned.” —The National (U.A.E.)
“An informed narrative that strongly suggests that despite their name, only when captured do the mammals become dangerous to humans. Free Willy, indeed.”--New York Daily News
“Kirby has done his homework and does an excellent job of educating the public about orcas in the wild, as well as highlighting the dangers inherent in keeping these highly evolved, intelligent animals in captivity.” --Examiner.com
“Award-winning author David Kirby's forthcoming book, "Death at SeaWorld," meticulously chronicles the miserable lives and deaths of marine mammals in captivity.”- Sacramento Bee
“A masterful work.” --Seattle Post Intelligencer
“Eye-opening poolside reading… Death isn't supposed to pop up in environments carefully choreographed for family fun.” --San Francisco Bay Guardian
“A real-life scientific thriller.” --Barnes and Noble
“One of the summers most anticipated new releases”-- Apple I-Bookstore
“A new book examining the dark side of keeping killer whales in captivity has slammed SeaWorld for its treatment of the enormous beasts and for massive safety failings which still haunt the world famous marine parks.”--Daily Mail (UK)
“Fascinating, shocking, even infuriating, but ultimately rewarding… Discover the majesty of killer whales, the inherent cruelty of their captivity and the passion of those who fight for their freedom.”--Shelf Aware, Online Book Reviews
“A page-turning book… a disturbing account that will be hard for SeaWorld to transcend… Kirby makes it horrifyingly clear how serious (captivity) can be for human safety and orca well-being.”--Waynes Blog, Wayne Pacelle, CEO of The Humane Society of the United States
“Even if you're not an animal nut like me, David Kirby's Death at Sea World is a fascinating book.”--Sam Simon, Co-Creator of The Simpsons and leading animal-rights activist
“An exhilarating journalistic achievement—the reporting is singularly deep and wide, the research enormously meticulous, the storytelling as gripping as in a great novel.”--Talking Animals with Duncan Strauss, WMNF-FM, Tampa
“Readers who value the natural world and the other intelligent species we share it with will find Death at SeaWorld fascinating, shocking, even infuriating, but ultimately rewarding.”- Shelf Awareness
“The important and accurate information in this book is strong… The hero of the book is Naomi Rose, whose doctoral research on wild orcas led to her current position as senior scientist at the Humane Society of the United States.”- The Charlotte Observer
“[Death at SeaWorld] is required reading for anyone who wants to know what really goes on behind the glamour of SeaWorld. Get a copy of this book. Its about time it was written.”--Fayetteville Observer
“Kirby's knockout format is articulate and mind-blowing. This riveting read is not one that will easily be dismissed.” --Digital Journal
“Lives are at stake here, and Kirby can be trusted to tell the story, having won a passel of awards for his investigative work.” --Library Journal
“Journalist Kirby offers another passionate industry exposé … the narrative goes into high gear with its concluding confrontation.” --Publishers Weekly
“Simply superb… David Kirby has left no stone unturned. He has successfully refuted the arguments put forth by the pro-captivity advocates” -Philosophy Book Review
“Captivity disrupts (orca) behavior in practically every manner. Contrary to marine mammal exhibition industry claims, orca lifespans are significantly shortened in captivity.”-- Animal People Magazine
“I particularly enjoyed this book. It reads very much like a novel to the point when you are staying up later than you should to finish it.”--San Juan Island Update
“The bottom line of these findings is that keeping these magnificent beings in confinement is not a good thing.”--Wild Time Radio TCR-FM (UK
Review
“Kirby makes a passionate case for captivity as the reason orcas become killers (and) tells the story like a thriller… We probably can't free the orcas in captivity today, but we could make the current group of captive killer whales the last.” --Wall Street Journal
“A chilling depiction… Kirby lays out a compelling scientific argument against killer whale captivity”-New Scientist
“A gripping inspection… Hard to put down.”--Booklist (***Starred Review)
“Brilliantly and intensively researched and conveyed with clarity and thoughtfulness, Kirbys work of high-quality non-fiction busts the whale debate wide open… Reads like a thriller and horrifies like Hannibal Lector.” --San Francisco Book Review - FIVE STARS
“Kirby places this much-publicized tragic incident within the context of decades of warnings by marine biologists and animal advocates about the risks of keeping these giant predators in captivity. A real-life scientific thriller.” --Barnes and Noble
“As David Kirby so eloquently documents in this timely work, killer-whale captivity only benefits the captors. It is impossible to read ‘Death at SeaWorld and come to any other conclusion.” - Jane Goodall, Ph.D., D.B.E., Founder, the Jane Goodall Institute, UN Messenger of Peace
"Entertaining, engaging and enraging - The fairy tale fantasy that the captivity marine mammal industry has spun for the unwary public is expertly unraveled in this non-fiction crime thriller." - Louie Psihoyos, Academy Award winning director of The Cove
“In this authoritative and superbly investigative page-turner, certain to ruffle feathers and fins, David Kirby … reports brilliantly on the escalating troubles and conflicts, the surprising and sordid underbelly of life — and death — at SeaWorld.”- Erich Hoyt, author of the best-selling classic Orca: The Whale Called Killer
“Death at SeaWorld is one of the most important books, if not the most important book, ever written on the horrific plight of captive cetaceans. Kirby systematically dismantles the arguments used to justify keeping these incredibly intelligent and sentient beings in aquatic cages. - Marc Bekoff, University of Colorado, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals
"This is a book everyone should read… David Kirby's ‘Death at SeaWorld outlines in grim detail just how bad captivity is for orcas and other marine mammals."- Richard O'Barry, Director of Earth Island Institute's Dolphin Project and star of The Cove
“At last, both sides of the story behind the events at SeaWorld are being told and the truth is finally getting out there. Every budding orca trainer should consider this the must-read book of their career.”
-Dr. Ingrid N. Visser, Founder & Principal Scientist, Orca Research Trust
“One helluva book! David Kirby provides the most complete and accurate account of what I perceive as a transgression of morality toward the animal kingdom---the slavery of orcas, supreme beings in the aquatic world.” -Ken Balcomb, Director, Center for Whale Research
“David Kirbys research is impeccable and his words unforgettable. You will never view dolphin and orca shows the same way again.”- Lori Marino, PhD, Senior Lecturer in Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology, Emory University
“This remarkable book deserves to be acknowledged as the most significant and moving account of the often disastrous interaction of cetaceans and humans since Moby-Dick.”-Richard Ellis, author of Men and Whales, The Empty Ocean, and The Great Sperm Whale
“Kirby shows that the reality (of orca captivity) is more akin to a circus, in which any benefits are outweighed by the cost to the whale - and sometimes to the keepers.”--Financial Times
“Thorough and disturbing… One of the great books of the summer”
-Columbus Dispatch
“SeaWorld got a firm slap in the form of journalist David Kirby's fascinating and deeply disturbing book.”--Christian Science Monitor
“An outstanding book… very-well written, extremely well documented, and timely.”--Psychology Today
#1 Readers Poll Choice for Summer Books -Wall Street Journal Online
“This is a warning-bell book on par with Upton Sinclair's The Jungle or Jessica Mitford's The American Way of Death… After Kirby's brutal and ground-breaking work, we can't say we weren't warned.” —The National (U.A.E.)
“An informed narrative that strongly suggests that despite their name, only when captured do the mammals become dangerous to humans. Free Willy, indeed.”--New York Daily News
“Kirby has done his homework and does an excellent job of educating the public about orcas in the wild, as well as highlighting the dangers inherent in keeping these highly evolved, intelligent animals in captivity.” --Examiner.com
“Award-winning author David Kirby's forthcoming book, "Death at SeaWorld," meticulously chronicles the miserable lives and deaths of marine mammals in captivity.”- Sacramento Bee
“A masterful work.” --Seattle Post Intelligencer
“Eye-opening poolside reading… Death isn't supposed to pop up in environments carefully choreographed for family fun.” --San Francisco Bay Guardian
“A real-life scientific thriller.” --Barnes and Noble
“One of the summers most anticipated new releases”-- Apple I-Bookstore
“A new book examining the dark side of keeping killer whales in captivity has slammed SeaWorld for its treatment of the enormous beasts and for massive safety failings which still haunt the world famous marine parks.”--Daily Mail (UK)
“Fascinating, shocking, even infuriating, but ultimately rewarding… Discover the majesty of killer whales, the inherent cruelty of their captivity and the passion of those who fight for their freedom.”--Shelf Aware, Online Book Reviews
“A page-turning book… a disturbing account that will be hard for SeaWorld to transcend… Kirby makes it horrifyingly clear how serious (captivity) can be for human safety and orca well-being.”--Waynes Blog, Wayne Pacelle, CEO of The Humane Society of the United States
“Even if you're not an animal nut like me, David Kirby's Death at Sea World is a fascinating book.”--Sam Simon, Co-Creator of The Simpsons and leading animal-rights activist
“An exhilarating journalistic achievement—the reporting is singularly deep and wide, the research enormously meticulous, the storytelling as gripping as in a great novel.”--Talking Animals with Duncan Strauss, WMNF-FM, Tampa
“Readers who value the natural world and the other intelligent species we share it with will find Death at SeaWorld fascinating, shocking, even infuriating, but ultimately rewarding.”- Shelf Awareness
“The important and accurate information in this book is strong… The hero of the book is Naomi Rose, whose doctoral research on wild orcas led to her current position as senior scientist at the Humane Society of the United States.”- The Charlotte Observer
“[Death at SeaWorld] is required reading for anyone who wants to know what really goes on behind the glamour of SeaWorld. Get a copy of this book. Its about time it was written.”--Fayetteville Observer
“Kirby's knockout format is articulate and mind-blowing. This riveting read is not one that will easily be dismissed.” --Digital Journal
“Lives are at stake here, and Kirby can be trusted to tell the story, having won a passel of awards for his investigative work.” --Library Journal
“Journalist Kirby offers another passionate industry exposé … the narrative goes into high gear with its concluding confrontation.” --Publishers Weekly
“Simply superb… David Kirby has left no stone unturned. He has successfully refuted the arguments put forth by the pro-captivity advocates” -Philosophy Book Review
“Captivity disrupts (orca) behavior in practically every manner. Contrary to marine mammal exhibition industry claims, orca lifespans are significantly shortened in captivity.”-- Animal People Magazine
“I particularly enjoyed this book. It reads very much like a novel to the point when you are staying up later than you should to finish it.”--San Juan Island Update
“The bottom line of these findings is that keeping these magnificent beings in confinement is not a good thing.”--Wild Time Radio TCR-FM (UK
About the Author
DAVID KIRBY is the author of Evidence of Harm, which was a New York Times bestseller, winner of the 2005 Investigative Reporters and Editors award for best book, and a finalist for the New York Public Library Helen Bernstein Award for Excellence in Journalism, and Animal Factory, an acclaimed investigation into the environmental impact of factory farms. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.