The wide wide sea Imperial ambition, first contact and the fateful final voyage of Captain James Cook

Hampton Sides

Book - 2024

Part high-seas adventure, part examination of the Age of Exploration, this account of Captain James Cook's last voyage in 1776 charts how his overt and covert missions came to a head on the island of Hawaii and left behind a complex and controversial legacy still debated to this day.

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  • Author's Note
  • Prologue: And Louder Grew the Shouting
  • Book 1. The First Navigator of Europe
  • 1. Negative Discoverer
  • 2. Proto-Anthropologist
  • 3. A Human Pet
  • 4. A Fine Retreat
  • 5. A Natural Politeness
  • 6. The Problem of the Ice
  • 7. No Tutor but Nature
  • 8. Fresh Discoveries
  • 9. The Secret Instructions
  • Book 2. The Weight of My Resentment
  • 10. Isla del Infierno
  • 11. Tavern of the Seas
  • 12. The Isle of Desolation
  • 13. Lunawanna-alonnah
  • 14. A Shocking Scene of Carnage
  • 15. The Land of the Long White Cloud
  • 16. Return to Grass Cove
  • Book 3. Faraway Heaven
  • 17. Aphrodite's Island
  • 18. This Barbarous Custom
  • 19. Duped by Every Designing Knave
  • 20. A Kingdom for a Goat
  • 21. The Ardor of Inviolable Friendship
  • 22. Faraway Heaven
  • 23. Scorched Up by the Heat of the Sun
  • 24. A New Race of People
  • 25. In the Land of the Menehune
  • Book 4. New Albion
  • 26. Foul Weather
  • 27. Soft Gold
  • 28. In Bering's Wake
  • 29. Deep Water and Bold Shores
  • 30. Possessed
  • 31. Risen in a New World
  • 32. Big with Every Danger
  • Part 5. Apotheosis
  • 33. Pathway of the Gods
  • 34. Approaching Adoration
  • 35. Golden Days
  • 36. A Welcome Overstayed
  • 37. The Water's Edge
  • 38. The Bones of Captain Cook
  • 39. The Long Concealed Arrangements of the Almighty
  • Epilogue: Lono's Tears
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

The best-selling Sides (On Desperate Ground, 2018) tackles the somewhat controversial topic of contact between European explorers and Indigenous peoples through the life and exploits of the great British navigator and cartographer James Cook in this adventure of the high seas. Cook set sail from London in July 1776 with the objectives of returning a Polynesian man to his home islands after an extended stay in England and exploring the Pacific coast of North America in search of the fabled Northwest Passage. Sides has an impressive knack for immersing the reader in the realities of seafaring, from the miseries of vermin, disease, and accidental deaths to the need for supplies and repairs on Cook's vessels--all expertly contrasted with the exhilaration of reaching new and different locales. Sides proceeds objectively, describing the voyage as it was while also providing an historical context and current scholarly arguments surrounding the effects of European exploration. Beautifully written and impeccably researched, The Wide Wide Sea will delight readers new to the topic as well as those versed in earlier looks at James Cook and his milieu.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Bestseller Sides (On Desperate Ground) recreates in this propulsive account the final expedition of Captain James Cook (1728--1779), which culminated with his murder by native Hawaiians. Diving into the long-standing mystery of what went wrong, Sides spins an observation made by previous chroniclers--that "on his final voyage something wasn't quite right with the famous captain... his personality had definitely changed"--into a sidelong indictment of imperialism. Tracing Cook's transformation from toast of the Enlightenment, a heroic "mariner-scientist" who ferried naturalists around the world and made friends with Natives, to violent authoritarian who dispensed brutal punishments for minor infractions, like theft of supplies, against Indigenous communities as well as his crew, Sides eschews the conventional "medical" explanation of Cook's "profoundly changed... outlook." Instead, Sides insinuates, the "sinister force pulling at his psyche and his soul" was Cook's growing conviction--heightened by increasingly frequent signs that Spanish vessels were exploring the same territories in the Pacific--that he must be more ruthless in claiming new land for Britain. With an admirably light touch, Sides teases out his convincing thesis amid a riveting day-by-day narrative of the voyage and fascinating asides on such matters as the fierce anthropological debate over whether the Hawaiians really considered Cook to be the god Lono. This exquisitely crafted and novelistic portrait of the mercurial captain enthralls. (Apr.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An acclaimed historian takes to the sea in this rousing tale of exploration. Sides, author of Hellhound on His Trail and Ghost Soldiers, writes that James Cook's (1728-1779) voyages "form a morally complicated tale that has left a lot for modern sensibilities to unravel and critique." The author seeks to "describe what happened during his consequential, ambitious, and ultimately tragic final voyage," with 180 people on two ships--the Discovery and the Resolution, captained by William Bligh--that embarked in July 1776. Along with a wide range of animals, leaving with Cook was Mai, a Tahitian whose "life story offered a poignant allegory of first contact between England and the people of Oceania." The plan was to sail around the Cape of Good Hope, drop Mai off on an island, claim any new territories, and search for the Northwest Passage. Fortunately, Capt. Charles Clerke, released from debtor's prison, joined the Discovery in Plymouth. Crew members were noticing changes in Cook's demeanor. They reached Cape Town in October, rested, and repaired and restocked. After Clerke arrived, they set off in November. In late January, they reached Tasmania and then New Zealand. In August, they arrived at Tahiti, the "place of their wildest desires," and removed most of the animals the king gave them. When a Native islander stole a goat, Cook began destroying canoes and setting fires on Moorea, "punishing the many for the misdeeds of an individual." In December, Cook headed north, eventually reaching America's western coast, Alaska, Asia, and the icy Arctic Circle, making contact with many Natives. His voyage ended in Hawaii when he was killed by angry Natives in a grisly fight. Sides draws on numerous contemporaneous sources to create a fascinating, immersive adventure story featuring just the right amount of historical context. Lusciously detailed and insightful history, masterfully told. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.