Deep Water, James Bradley
Deep Water, James Bradley
3 Rating(s)
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Deep Water
The World in the Ocean

Author: James Bradley

Narrator: Stephen James King

Unabridged: 14 hr 10 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: HarperAudio

Published: 07/02/2024


Synopsis

2025 NAUTILUS BOOK AWARDS GOLD WINNER""Deep Water is a major achievement....Bradley's skills both as novelist and essayist converge here to create this wise, compassionate and urgent book, characterized throughout by a clarity of prose and a bracing moral gaze that searches water, self and reader."" —ROBERT MACFARLANE, bestselling author of UnderlandIn this thrilling work—a blend of history, science, nature writing, and environmentalism—acclaimed writer James Bradley plunges into the unknown to explore the deepest recesses of the natural world.Seventy-one percent of the earth’s surface is ocean. These waters created, shaped, and continue to sustain not just human life, but all life on Planet Earth, and perhaps beyond it. They serve as the stage for our cultural history—driving human development from evolution through exploration, colonialism, and the modern era of global leisure and trade. They are also the harbingers of the future—much of life on Earth cannot survive if sea levels are too low or too high, temperatures too cold or too warm. Our oceans are vast spaces of immense wonder and beauty, and our relationship to them is innate and awe inspired.Deep Water is both a lyrically written personal meditation and an intriguing wide-ranging reported epic that reckons with our complex connection to the seas. It is a story shaped by tidal movements and deep currents, lit by the insights of philosophers, scientists, artists and other great minds. Bradley takes readers from the atomic creation of the oceans, to the wonders within, such as fish migrations guided by electromagnetic sensing. He describes the impacts of human population shifts by boat and speaks directly and uncompromisingly to the environmental catastrophe that is already impacting our lives. It is also a celebration of the ocean’s glories and the extraordinary efforts of the scientists and researchers who are unlocking its secrets. These myriad strands are woven together into a tapestry of life that captures not only our relationship with the planet, but our past, and perhaps most importantly, what lies ahead for us.A brilliant blend of Robert MacFarlane’s Underland, Susan Casey’s The Underworld, and Simon Winchester’s Pacific and The Atlantic, Deep Water taps into the essence of our planet and who we are.

About James Bradley

James Bradley is a writer and critic. His books include the novels Wrack, The Deep Field, The Resurrectionist, Clade, and Ghost Species; a book of poetry, Paper Nautilus; and The Penguin Book of the Ocean. Alongside his books, James has an established career as an essayist and reviewer, whose work has appeared in many publications, including The Guardian, The Monthly, Sydney Review of Books, Times Literary Supplement, Meanjin, and Griffith Review. His fiction has won or been shortlisted for a wide range of Australian and international literary awards, and his essays and articles have been shortlisted twice for the Bragg Prize for Science Writing and nominated for a Walkley Award. In 2012, he won the Pascall Award for Australia’s Critic of the Year. He is currently an Honorary Associate at the Sydney Environment Centre at the University of Sydney. 


Reviews

Goodreads review by matt on April 05, 2024

I started James Bradley’s Deep Water thinking it was a book about the oceans, I’m finishing with an extraordinary reminder of how interconnected we all are on this planet and an urgent call for new thinking on this incredible and vitally important environment. Essential read.......more

Goodreads review by Ali on April 26, 2024

Bradley almost fools you, in the early part of this excellent book, into thinking that this is going to be a series of science essays on oceanography and associated topics. Chapters on fish and sea mammals, currents and flows, are engaging and intriguing but seem largely stand-alone. A hint, however......more

Goodreads review by Inga on May 06, 2024

A masterwork. Full of beauty and wonder - a fascinating exploration of other ways of being. This ecological history of the ocean is also the history of human intervention, a reckoning with the state of our watery planet - and with grief. Yet Deep Water offers something more: a map for the way forwar......more

Goodreads review by Monica on September 17, 2024

I really wanted to enjoy this book, and I am so disappointed by it. When I worked in marketing, we were taught that the number one rule in marketing is never antagonize your customer. Even if it gets you some approval from people who don't like that customer, you end up losing more customers than yo......more

Goodreads review by Mick on June 24, 2024

Bradley sketches a sprawling world that interconnects the world’s oceans with everything from the universe and modern day slavery to geopolitics and the origins of life. It becomes abundantly clear that rather than lying at the edge of our world, the oceans are right in the middle. Every chapter, th......more