The two-headed whale Life, loss, and the tangled legacy of whaling in the Antarctic

Sandy Winterbottom

Book - 2023

"The Two-Headed Whale vividly brings to life the spectacular scenery and wildlife of the vast Southern Oceans, set alongside the true-life story of Anthony Ford, the boy in the grave, as he sailed the same seas and toiled in an industry where profits outranked human life. Drawing together threads of nature and travel writing with an unflinching narrative of life aboard a whaling factory ship and the legacy it left behind, The Two-Headed Whale leaves us questioning our troubled relationship with the extraordinary abundance of this planet."--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
History
Published
Vancouver ; Berkeley ; London : Greystone Books 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Sandy Winterbottom (author)
Physical Description
xi, 243 pages : black and white map ; 23 cm
Issued also in electronic format
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 231-239).
ISBN
9781778400902
9781778401732
  • Forecast
  • Part 1. South
  • 1. Orientation
  • 2. Navigation
  • 3. Landfall
  • Part 2. Blue
  • 4. Into the Blue
  • 5. Antarctic Blue
  • 6. El Fin del Mundo
  • Part 3. North
  • 7. Search Patterns
  • 8. The Last Whalers
  • 9. Out of the Blue
  • Outlook
  • Notes and Sources
  • Acknowledgements
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this poignant debut, environmentalist Winterbottom explores the bloody history of the Antarctic whaling industry in the 20th century. Winterbottom writes that she originally approached the topic with an eye toward investigating the mass slaughter of whales. (The figures astonish: upward of 325,000 blue whales, just one species that was hunted, were killed in the Southern Ocean surrounding Antarctica over the course of 20th century; around 5,000 remain today.) However, she became captivated by the accounts of whalers, whose labor conditions were dire: injured workers were not allowed to get immediate medical help (since diverting the ship would reduce profits), whaling stations were overrun with rats, and many of the men suffered psychological trauma as a result of participating in the carnage, which often entailed gruesome cruelties such as pulling babies from pregnant females and leaving calves to starve to death. Winterbottom focuses on the story of Anthony Ford, a 19-year-old whaler who died by suicide after he slept through his ship's departure and was left stranded for six months at a remote Antarctic whaling station. Combining archival research with her own journey to Antarctica, Winterbottom's devastating narrative draws parallels between whaling and the fossil fuel industry, both extractive processes run by corporations at the expense of the environment and regular people. The result is an urgent and moving plea for accountability and change. (Oct.)

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