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Fathoms

By: Rebecca Giggs
Narrated by: Shiromi Arserio
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Summary

There is a kind of hauntedness in wild animals today: a spectre related to environmental change.... Our fear is that the unseen spirits that move in them are ours. Once more, animals are a moral force.

When Rebecca Giggs encountered a humpback whale stranded on her local beach in Australia, she began to wonder how the lives of whales might shed light on the condition of our seas. How do whales experience environmental change? Has our connection to these fabled animals been transformed by technology? What future awaits us, and them? And what does it mean to write about nature in the midst of an ecological crisis?

In Fathoms, Giggs blends natural history, philosophy and science to explore these questions with clarity and hope. In lively, inventive prose, she introduces us to whales so rare they have never been named; she tells us of the astonishing variety found in whale sounds and of whale ‘pop’ songs that sweep across hemispheres. She takes us into the deeps to discover that one whale’s death can spark a great flourishing of creatures. We travel to Japan to board whaling ships, examine the uncanny charisma of these magnificent mammals and confront the plastic pollution now pervading their underwater environment.

In the spirit of Rachel Carson and John Berger, Fathoms is a work of profound insight and wonder. It marks the arrival of an essential new voice in narrative nonfiction and provides us with a powerful, surprising and compelling view of some of the most urgent issues of our time.

©2020 Rebecca Giggs (P)2022 W F Howes
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Critic reviews

"‘I can’t think of many books in which love for the world and uncompromising, ever-deepening rigour come together in this way. Time slows down. This book makes a permanent dent in the reader." (Maria Tumarkin)

"Fathoms took my breath away. Humanity’s relationship with nature has never been more important or vulnerable, and we are truly fortunate that at such a pivotal moment, a writer of Rebecca Giggs’s calibre is here to capture every beautiful detail, every aching nuance. She is in a league of her own." (Ed Yong, author of I Contain Multitudes)

"Fathoms is a marvel: a glorious, prismatic, deeply affecting hymn to the beauty, majesty and extremity of whales and the human imagining of them." (James Bradley)

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Heavy, like a whale

“Fathoms”, by Rebecca Giggs, is an exploration of the past and present of whales, while contextualizing recent human activity and behaviours through the medium of whales. Thus the byline “the world in the whale”.
Fathoms then is not just a book about whales, but about the constant attack on nature by humans, with the state of whales and the changes in attitudes of humans towards them becoming something of a metaphor and trope of man’s constant damage of the environment.
Giggs regards whales as intricately linked to the environmentalist movement, showing how the fight to ban whaling was the first global campaign waged across borders, bringing organisations like Greenpeace into public consciousness, and one which appealed to the sense of wonderment that whales educed.
While whaling is now banned in most parts of the world now, the threats remain persistent, while whale populations diminished dramatically over the past 2 centuries. Industrialisation has led to a high level of chemicals being ingested by whales, with some of the long lasting chemicals such as PCBs still in the seas in spite of being banned by many governments in the Seventies and Eighties. Giggs informs in great detail on the role of these chemicals – and muses at the irony that many of these chemicals and compounds were first created by chemists from gases generated by burning whale oil.
The role of whale oil, whaling and whale meat in “civilisation” is also explained and discussed in detail. The book starts with a history of whaling, and the ubiquitous presence of whale derived products in Europe and America in the 19th century, drawing parallels to the ubiquitousness of plastics today. Whaling also led to widespread “defaunation”, a new (for me) term signifying a state of a massive reduction in numbers, but not quite extermination, of a species and its impact on nearby fauna and related ecosystems. Thus the rise of industrial scale whaling was accompanied by a concomitant decrease in the numbers of all kinds of sea animals which were often hunted as meat for those on the whaling ships themselves.
Some of the writing is quite direct and discomforting - indeed right from the start, as the prologue describes the author lining up at to see a beached whale as it slowly dies. The elaborate description of what the whale is likely going through can be disturbing - as its body, meant to conserve heat in cold waters, becomes like a boiler on land and the whale basically goes slowly, heating to death.
Giggs knows her subject, and writes with feeling and pathos. And she keeps pulling out facts about whales that are quite amazing. For example, when whales die at sea, a whole ecosystem comes alive and thrives, living on, in and under the carcass, while feeding on it as it sinks to the seafloor.
But sometimes the detail is too much, and too abstruse, and after a while, I found it tiring. Perhaps the intensity and intricate construction of the prose itself is largely to blame for the weariness as much as the underlying sense of tragedy. The writing and the language felt heavy, a bit overly lyrical and frankly not much of a pleasure to read.
If you don’t tire the way I did, then there is a lot to read here about whales and wonder.

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