Leviathan: The History of Whaling in America | 
enlarge | Author: Eric Jay Dolin Creator: James Boles Publisher: Tantor Media Category: Book
List Price: $29.99 Buy New: $17.15 You Save: $12.84 (43%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 43 reviews Sales Rank: 1974691
Format: Audiobook, Cd Media: MP3 CD Edition: MP3 Una Number Of Items: 2 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
ISBN: 1400154847 Dewey Decimal Number: 639.280973 EAN: 9781400154845 ASIN: 1400154847
Publication Date: July 2, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new Item. CD, DVD, Book, VHS more than 400 000 titles to choose from. ALL days Low Price !
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Product Description This is the epic history of the "iron men in wooden boats" who built an industrial empire through the pursuit of whales. Eric Jay Dolin chronicles the rise of the burgeoning whaling industry to its decline as the twentieth century dawned. Containing a wealth of naturalistic detail on whales, Leviathan is the most original and stirring history of American whaling in many decades.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 38 more reviews...
A Great Read August 23, 2008 I picked up "Leviathan" on a whim during a visit to the North Carolina shore. I'm glad I did -- I could hardly believe how good it turned out to be. The detail, the sweep of the narrative and Dolin's wonderful writing all make this a very special book. I felt I understood my nation's history far better after reading it.
A Whale of A Tale August 3, 2008 What a superbly weaved tale in a very readable book which held my interests throughout. A great summer read on the beach or one whilst enjoying the quiet of an evening in the hamptons, the vinyard or nantucket itself all prominently featured. The whaling industry was truely the forbear of today's oil industry . . . good, bad or indifferent to the subject matter, you will likely learn a great deal and this one is hard to put down.
History comes alive June 28, 2008 It's cliched to say something like "The best history books bring history alive." The really, really best ones simply transport you back in time.
"Leviathan" does that, and with vivid first-hand accounts. It's one thing to think of whaling as some glorious adventure or conquest; it's quite the other to read a disgruntled sailor's cursing of his boss, who basically just decided to steal another year of his sailors' lives: "He ought to have the tooth ache for amusement and a bawling child to rock him to sleepe." Don't hold back -- tell us how you really feel!
Mixed in with the tales are larger-picture stuff, including the double-dealing of whalers during wartime as they struggled to keep the industry, err, afloat. Whaling was incredibly important to the New England communities that turned it into an industrial production; Dolin casts economic issues into the proper context even as he finds voices from the past to explain it.
I'd been recommending another book, "The Devil in the White City," for years -- until I read "Leviathan: A History of Whaling in America." This is the book I recommend to all now, and will continue to do so for the forseeable future.
Sweeping May 4, 2008 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
This three hundred year saga of American whaling details one of the most significant industries of the New England coast. Along the way it captures the social and economic history of the nation through the triumphs and travails of this fascinating calling.
Starting with Captain John Smith's failed whaling expedition to the New World in 1614, Eric Dolan traces the rise of this endeavor from its rapid expansion in the colonial era up and down the Eastern seaboard, to its golden era in the mid 1850's when the sails of New England's whale ships whitened every sea. Americans were preeminent at this vocation and American whale oil lit the homes and cities of the world, greased the gears of the Industrial Revolution and shaped the course of feminine fashion. It produced amazingly brilliant candles and gave perfumes great staying power.
Leviathan is studded with fascinating vignettes while it traces the rise and fall of various whaling towns and industrialists. It is a most remarkable account of a fascinating, once vital, and by gone era in American history.
The Flurry of American Whaling, "Fin Out." March 31, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I don't generally read histories. I usually read novels. Although I love the subject matter of history, i.e. humanity, I find most historical narratives as dry as the leftover hardtack from a long sea voyage. In light of that it is essential to point out that Eric Jay Dolin's, Leviathan: The History of Whaling in America, is much more than just an historical narrative.
As an obsessive enthusiast of Herman Melville's Moby-Dick I have read that novel at least eight times. Every time I have the privilege of reading, and teaching, the greatest American novel ever written, I find myself in need of further research to embellish both my and my students' literary and historical experience of whaling. Dolin's history fills that sea bill of lading admirably. Not only is it a comprehensive history of the American Whaling Industry, as the title indicates, but it reads like one of the better novels I have ever relished. His creative success lies in the fact that he uses historicity, the citation of primary sources, in a way that allows the reader to envision the players and hear their voices.
As a student of Melville's prose I have always wondered about the Arthurian fascination I feel whenever I read the arresting Romance of The Quest for the White Whale. Reading Dolin's history helped me better understand the facts behind my Romantic fascination as well as vividly conveying the stories that delineate one of American history's most successful, significant and lucrative industries. A perfect example of this can be found in Chapter Five, "The Whale's Whale," when the author clearly explains the practical importance of hunting the Sperm Whale and how it got its name.
The ultimate success of Dolin's history can be distilled into one word, storytelling. Dolin is a magnificent and articulate storyteller. The exhaustive research that went into the composition of this history includes some of the most compelling and adventurous tales this reader has ever experienced. From the Colonial tales of "Crook Jaw," through the American Revolution, and right into the exploits of Commodore David Porter during the War of 1812, Dolin captures the full excitement and adventure of whaling and the country that "once upon a time" excelled the rest of the world in its economic and military supremacy. A nation that once achieved that prowess through innovation and creativity rather than sheer wealth and brute force. Moving from there he vividly portrays the ascent and decline of whaling through "The Golden Age" to "The Disaster and Decay," of the industry not long after the mayhem of the Civil War. In short, the success of this book is no fluke. It has won numerous awards because of the author's well-yarned tales.
This reader is also struck by the abundantly hopeful undertones of this work. The fact that America survived its dependency on whale oil, an industry as vital to American sustenance then as crude oil is today, through the discovery of alternative fuel sources, is a living testament to Yankee ingenuity. That ingenuity has historically dictated our success as a nation. What is particularly pertinent about Dolin's history is the lesson it contains; as a nation we have weaned ourselves off detrimental energy dependencies before, with some determination, we can do it again!
The W.W. Norton Company also deserves rich praise. Through the publication of this brilliant history they have maintained their sterling, and well-deserved, reputation for publishing the finest, and most authoritative, critical works available. Like their Critical Edition of Moby-Dick they have once again proven themselves to be the zenith of scholarly research and expert storytelling. As such, Eric Jay Dolin and W.W. Norton richly compliment one another; they both have a good eye for a great tale.
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