Synopses & Reviews
Gordon Chaplins father was a seemingly happy-go-lucky, charismatic adventurer who married a wealthy heiress and somehow transformed himself into the author of a landmark scientific study,
Fishes of the Bahamas, published by the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. As a young boy, the author took part in collecting specimens for his father. Fifty years later, he was asked to join a team from the same institution studying the state of sea life in the Bahamian waters where he grew up, as measured against his fathers benchmark. The first of the sea changes presented in this eloquent book stems from climate change and is the drastic transformation of ocean life due to global warming. The second is his fathers miraculous transformation from presumed playboy into scientist. And the third involves the authors own complicated relationship with his parents and in particular his father, as he grew older and assumed the part of the prodigal son. Fifty years later, returning to his childhood home, he delves into the mysteries of his fathers life and the impossibility of ever truly recovering the past, or ever returning home.
Illustrated with gorgeous color plates from the original Fishes of the Bahamas and featuring descriptions of exquisite undersea beauty and heartrending devastation, this is a status report on climate change unlike any other, both a report from the field and an intensely personal reckoning.
Review
"[Dark Wind is] A harrowing memoir of adventure, disaster, guilt, and the subsequent anguished search for understanding." Publishers Weekly
Review
"[Dark Wind] is the kind of memoir . . . that makes readers feel they are not just reading a book but reviewing a life." The New York Times
Review
"Full Fathom Five is a strange and beautiful specimen pulled up from the deep—part study of fish diversity in the Caribbean, part scientific report on the health of coral reefs threatened by climate change, and part memoir of the author’s father, sister, and wife. Together they make a book that is touching and troubling by turns, but always full of life." Tom Powers, author of Heisenberg's War
Review
"Wonderfully written . . . Not only a significant scientific contribution in its own right but the touching tribute of a son’s ultimately successful quest to shoulder his father’s important legacy.
" Dr. John E. Randall, Senior Ichthyologist Emeritus, Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum, Honolulu, Hawaii
Review
"A unique picture of the effects of climate change. Readers aware of the abuse of our marine environments will find the conclusions as well as the techniques of the study most interesting. And finally, it’s a good read!" Stan Waterman, International SCUBA Diving Hall of Fame.
Review
"A uniquely personal and intimate portrait [and] an inviting, threatening, and richly informative tale of rarely observed fish community structures in the Bahamas.
" Thomas Byrne Edsall, Joseph Pulitzer II and Edith Pulitzer Moore Professor, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, and author of The Age of Austerity
Review
"Gordon Chaplin’s new book is a fascinating read. It is both a gruesome memoir and an intriguing account of a science expedition. I loved it. Buy it and put some fun in your life." Jim Harrison, author of The River Swimmer and other books
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"Like donning a dive mask and entering a tropical world of color, clarity, and mystique, opening Full Fathom Five is a gateway into another world. . . . . A must read!”" Dr. Carole Baldwin, Curator of Fishes, Smithsonian Institution
Review
"Gordon Chapin dives into the past, present, and future of the ocean with eloquence, deep personal insight, and a message relevant for all people everywhere. With care, there is hope that the reefs and fishes that abounded in the Bahamas half a century ago will be as richly diverse and abundant in the seas of the future" Sylvia Earle, National Geographic Explorer in Residence
Review
"Gordon Chaplin has given us his inside stories on the many challenges and frustrations of mounting collecting expeditions today and the important scientific insights that the resampling of fishes and coral reef habitats have yielded." John G. Lundberg, Chaplin Chair and Curator of Ichthyology, The Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia
Review
"In combining cherished recollections of his upbringing by a playboy turned scientist father with revelations from the Academy’s diving team about climate change–related underwater devastation, Chaplin sounds a very distinctive environmental warning that will affect his readers on many levels." Booklist
Synopsis
A scientific adventure story and a spellbinding memoir about personal discovery and sea changes of many kinds
About the Author
Gordon Chaplin was a journalist in the Saigon bureau of Newsweek and at Bangkok World, the Baltimore Sun, and the Washington Post. He has also worked in sea conservation with the group Niparaja and since 2003 has been a research associate at the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia. He is the author of several books, including Dark Wind: A Survivor’s Tale of Love and Loss. He lives with his wife and daughter in New York City and Hebron, New York.