Synopses & Reviews
Part odyssey, part pilgrimage, this epic personal narrative follows the author's exploration of coasts, islands, reefs, and the sea's abyssal depths. Scientist and fisherman Carl Safina takes readers on a global journey of discovery, probing for truth about the world's changing seas, deftly weaving adventure, science, and political analysis.
Carl Safina is the founder and director of the Living Oceans Program at the National Audubon Society, an adjunct professor at Yale University, and a recipient of the Pew Charitable Trust's Scholar's Award in Conservation and the Environment. Eye of the Albatross is his most recent book, which is also published by Henry Holt & Co.
A New York Times Notable Book
A Los Angeles Times Best Nonfiction Selection
A Library Journal Best Science Book Selection
Part odyssey, part pilgrimage, this epic personal narrative follows the author's exploration of coasts, islands, reefs, and the sea's abyssal depths. Scientist and fisherman Safina takes readers on a global journey of discovery, probing for truth about the world's changing seas, deftly weaving adventure, science, and political analysis. We observe people whose lives and occupations unfold in a drama of clashing personal histories and daily struggles for existence. We enter the embattled world of New England fisherman on the trail of overfished giant tuna; visit the Philippine Islamic separatists trying to protect their coral reefs; bear witness to the northwestern salmon rivers and estuaries degraded by deforestation; observe the fragile South Pacific reefs whose fishes and invertebrates are the prey of rapacious market hunters. Safina shows us how our exploitation of the ocean's resources is little different from the nineteenth-century plunder that destroyed the buffalo. But he also tells dramatic and hopeful stories of the sea's revival and replenishment.
"Safina's Song is the Silent Spring for our time . . . A heartbreaking requiem for the world's aquatic resources . . . a plaintive, sensitive, caring, intelligent, indignant paean to his beloved waters and their threatened inhabitants. His book will make you mad as hell; it will make you marvel at the wonders he describes (his descriptions of bluefin tuna, like the great fish themselves, are poetry), and it will make you glad there is someone like him to devote his life to the preservation of the Earth's most fragile and misunderstood ecosystems . . . It should be a clarion call for people who think that creatures of the depths (or the shallows) are safe from the voracious predations of fishermen. I loved this book, but I hated what it was about. It was like reading a brilliant description of Auschwitz or Hiroshima. It is a frightening, important book. Read it and weep."Richard Ellis, Los Angeles Times
"[A] landmark book . . . passionate and enthralling . . . In Song for the Blue Ocean, his engrossing and illuminating journey to the world's marine killing grounds stirs up typhoon-sized waves of bad news for almost anyone fond of eating, catching or admiring fish, including sushi lovers, backyard swordfish barbecuers, sport fishermen hoping for more than sunburn and a beer hangover from a day's charter, scuba divers lacking the time or money to search out reefs that dynamite and cyanide have not yet turned into underwater Hiroshimas, independent commercial fishermen and travelers expecting fishing boats and fishermen in coastal villages instead of boutiques."Thurston Clarke, The New York Times Book Review
"Song for the Blue Ocean mesmerizes readers with many such exciting accounts of Safina's adventures while examining the ecological and social consequences of three controversial ocean fisheries. On his way to the inescapable conclusion that many fisheries have been over-harvested and poorly managed, Safina transforms encounters with ordinary people and places into instructive vignettes. We nibble away on his fascinating stories until wham! he hooks us repeatedly with his premise . . . His bright new voice now joins that influential chorus, which includes Rachel Carson and Jacques Cousteau, of scientists turned eloquent ocean advocates."Harry E. Demarest, San Francisco Chronicle
"In this remarkable book, Carl Safina takes us on an odyssey across our ocean planet . . . This is a tale told accurately, fairly and with compassion . . . Song for the Blue Ocean is peopled with ordinary and extraordinary people whose efforts inspire and offer hope . . . In the end, though, this is a deeply shocking book . . . read it."Conservation Biology
"Passionate, disturbing . . . Safina is one of the world's leading voices for protection of the oceans and the creatures within them. From this solid position of authority, he could have written a worthy tome. Thank goodness he didn't. Instead, Safina has written a highly personal account of his experiences as he follows fishermen, biologists and others at the front lines of what will surely be the big conservation battle of the early 21st century . . . He recognizes that life is complicated, a welcome trait in a conservationistand in a traveling companion."Bob Holmes, New Scientist
"You will never think about fishor the oceanthe same way again."Sylvia Earle, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association
"Carl Safina's new book, Song for the Blue Ocean, is one of those revolutionary works that permanently alter our view of a subject."Bill McKibben, Interview
"Stunning . . . Poetic and powerful."The Washington Post
"With Song for the Blue Ocean, a beautifully written personal account of his travels and experiences with people and creatures of the ocean and coast, Carl Safina reinforces his role as perhaps the most charismatic, passionate, authoritative, and mature voice speaking on behalf of the world's oceans . . . Likely to become a classic."Michael A. Rivlin, Amicus Journal
"Environmental writing sometimes shuns the human side of things. Safina's focus on real peoplemen and women afraid for their livelihoodis one of the unexpected strengths of a book rich in science and natural observation."Civilization
"With the kind of clarity and eloquence found only in the very best nature writing, he enlightens us . . . with insight and wit; and his best, often sensuous phrases last like memories of chocolate after the taste itself is gone."Elliott Norse, Natural History
"Nearly every sentence in Safina's state-of-the-oceans report is informed by his deep sense of these waters' beautyand fragility . . . He knows much about a wide variety of species and their habitats, and what he doesn't know, we discover with him . . . Safina's first book is a welcome paean."Publishers Weekly
"Richly descriptive and energetically informative."Booklist
"Safina's findings are recorded in this bookand they will absolutely blow your socks off. This is Pulitzer Prize material; it should rank as one of the most important books of the late 20th century . . . because we must know the things Safina is trying to tell us."Fly Fishing in Salt Waters
"A haunting melody . . . Magnificent, profoundly disturbing."The Seattle Times
Review
"Safina's Song is the Silent Spring for our time. The book is a page turner. But unlike the phantasmagorical novels of Michael Crichton or Peter Benchley, where a little science is thrown in to give the plot an aura of verisimilitude, Safina's book is all true and wilder and more frightening. . . . I loved this book." (Richard Ellis, Los Angeles Times)
Review
"[Safina's] bright new voice joins that influential chorus, which includes Rachel Carson and Jacques Cousteau, of scientists turned eloquent ocean advocates." (Harry E. Demarest, San Francisco Chronicle)
Review
"You will never think about fish-or the ocean-the same way again." (Sylvia Earle, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association)
Review
"Safina's Song is the Silent Spring for our time. The book is a page turner. But unlike the phantasmagorical novels of Michael Crichton or Peter Benchley, where a little science is thrown in to give the plot an aura of verisimilitude, Safina's book is all true and wilder and more frightening. . . . I loved this book." --Richard Ellis,
Los Angeles Times"[Safina's] bright new voice joins that influential chorus, which includes Rachel Carson and Jacques Cousteau, of scientists turned eloquent ocean advocates." --Harry E. Demarest, San Francisco Chronicle
"Engrossing and illuminating . . . passionate and enthralling narrative . . . [A] landmark book." --Thurston Clarke, The New York Times Book Review
"You will never think about fish-or the ocean-the same way again." --Sylvia Earle, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association
"If you love the ocean, read this book." --Big Game Fishing Journal
Synopsis
Part odyssey, part pilgrimage, this epic personal narrative follows the author's exploration of coasts, islands, reefs, and the sea's abyssal depths. Scientist and fisherman Carl Safina takes readers on a global journey of discovery, probing for truth about the world's changing seas, deftly weaving adventure, science, and political analysis.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [441]-444) and index.
About the Author
Carl Safina, author of The View from Lazy Point: A Natural Year in an Unnatural World, Voyage of the Turtle: In Pursuit of the Earth's Last Dinosaur, Eye of the Albatross: Visions of Hope and Survival, Song for the Blue Ocean: Encounters Along the World's Coasts and Beneath the Seas, and founder of the Blue Ocean Institute, was named by the Audubon Society one of the leading conservationists of the twentieth century. He's been profiled by The New York Times, and PBS's Bill Moyers. His books and articles have won him a Pew Fellowship, Guggenheim Award, Lannan Literary Award, John Burroughs Medal, and a MacArthur Prize. He lives in Amagansett, New York.