Endeavour The ship that changed the world

Peter Moore, 1983-

Book - 2019

"A history of the legendary ship Endeavour"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Peter Moore, 1983- (author)
Edition
First American edition
Item Description
"Originally published in 2018 by Chatto & Windus, Great Britain, as Endeavour : the ship and the attitude that changed the world."
Physical Description
420 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [357]-363) and index.
ISBN
9780374148416
  • Map
  • Prologue: Endeavours of the Mind
  • Part 1. Life
  • 1. Acorns
  • Part 2. Trade
  • 2. Enigmas
  • 3. Cross Currents
  • 4. Mr Birds Ways
  • 5. Land of Liberty
  • Part 3. Exploration
  • 6. 'Take a Trip in disguise'
  • 7. Airy Dreams
  • 8. Perfect Strangers
  • 9. 'That rainbow serpent place'
  • Part 4. War
  • 10. 360°
  • 11. The Frozen Serpent of the South
  • 12. The Collier Fleet
  • 13. Ghosts
  • Epilogue: Endeavours
  • Acknowledgements
  • Select Bibliography
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

British explorer James Cook preferred the ship Resolution to the Endeavour, though the Endeavour is the one most commonly associated with him and the one that modelers still build. There are even two full-sized replicas of the ship, attesting to its enduring fame. Beginning life in 1764 as the collier Earl of Pembroke, in 1778, the Endeavour was scuttled near Newport, RI, as the transport Lord Sandwich 2. Yet the ship's voyage to circumnavigate the globe, which began in 1768, cements its place in history. In recounting the life of this celebrated ship, Moore (creative writing, Univ. of London and Univ. of Oxford, both UK) also tells of the English oak; takes readers to the port town of Whitby; provides accounts of Cook, Joseph Banks, and others; and delves into the Georgian world itself. Readers learn of the Great South Sea as it was when the Endeavor sailed and how that voyage impacted not just the people of Australia, New Zealand, and the Pacific archipelagos but Europeans as well. Well-written, with a thorough bibliography, Moore's narrative history of the Endeavor excellently captures the ship's legacy. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers and upper-division undergraduates through faculty. --Darlene M. Hall, Lake Erie College

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

When George Washington anxiously surveyed the British ships anchored in New York Harbor in August 1776, he would not have recognized a remarkable vessel that scant years earlier had circumnavigated the globe, enlarging geographic and scientific understanding of the planet. In recounting the history of the Endeavour, Moore illuminates the improbable life of a humble collier, reborn as a floating scientific research station, and later converted into a naval transport before being scuttled off Newport to blockade its harbor. In learning about one boat's world-straddling feats, readers also learn about the impetuous spirit that transformed society during the decades she sailed. The embodiment of that spirit, Captain James Cook, guides his bark through perilous waters, even surviving a collision with the Great Barrier Reef, so enabling astronomer Charles Green to observe rare celestial sights and naturalist Joseph Banks to collect exotic flora and fauna. To be sure, readers soon realize that in putting new lands on the British map, the Endeavour was exposing those lands to imperial forces that would destroy the traditional cultures of native peoples. With an acute eye, Moore limns the conflicting human impulses in the first episodes of this epoch-making drama. Maritime history that opens onto much more.--Bryce Christensen Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A dense but enlightening history of a highly significant 18th-century vessel.Moore (Creative Writing/Univ. of London and Univ. of Oxford; The Weather Experiment: The Pioneers Who Sought to See the Future, 2015, etc.) goes well beyond simple history or a mere tracking of the Endeavour's exploits. Though the minutiae may seem daunting at first, readers should stick with it, as the narrative transforms into a page-turning, breathtaking adventure story for the ages. Built in 1764 and initially christened the Earl of Pembroke, the ship was flat-bottomed and featured an open hold, reinforced hull, and bulldog nose that was designed for strength rather than beauty. Her first life was as a collier, transporting coal to London. Enter Alexander Dalrymple, long a student of the South Seas, who was determined to find the southern continent, Terra Australis. The Royal Society appointed him as observer of the expected 1769 transit of Venus across the sun. The king's funding made this an Admiralty voyage, which required a naval captain; officials didn't choose Dalrymple, but they used his plans. James Cook would take the helm of the now renamed Endeavour, accompanied by naturalist Joseph Banks, who was well-versed in Carl Linnaeus' new taxonomy system, and artist Sydney Parkinson. Idyllic days in Tahiti were followed by a complete circumnavigation and mapping of New Zealand and parts of Australia's coast. The reactions to the ship's arrival varied from distrust to fear to belligerence to aloofness. Her sudden discovery of the Great Barrier Reef illustrates just how perfect ship and captain were for the job. Among the many other discoveries thrillingly recounted by Moore: birds, fish, arthropods, and more than 30,000 botanical specimens. In her third life, the Endeavour made a series of journeys to the Falklands. As the author notes, "her biography roams across the history of the time, binding into a single narrative diverse moments of true historical significance."History at its most exciting and revealing. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.