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Chargement... Trois saisons de chasse aux requins géants (1952)par Gavin Maxwell
Top Five Books of 2014 (656) Chargement...
Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. With more enthusiasm than foresight, Maxwell and Geddes get into harpooning basking sharks from their remote base on Soay, just off Skye. Like the shark meat they harpoon, their venture eventually rots away. ( ) Harpoon Venture is the detailed account of the author’s attempt and subsequent failure to start a Basking shark fishery off the coast of Scotland on the economically depressed isle of Soay. The reading is silky smooth as he describes his tools, techniques and ideas behind this industry as well as the beautiful landscape Harpoon Venture unfolds upon. A lot of the book is spent on the water in the actual pursuit of these mammoth sharks detailing the evolution of the approaches used to hunt and then transport the kill. From the very beginning of this account, Maxwell describes, in gory detail, the harvesting and uses of the sharks as well as the business forces that are either the savior or the impending doom of his fishery. Overall, I am disappointed in only that this book sat on my shelf unread for two years.
Soay itself soon becomes an abattoir: the Hebrides reimagined by Bosch and Goya. The skin of basking sharks is spined, rasping and parasite-pitted: Maxwell and his fellow butchers wear "armoured gloves", and wield "axes, saws and knives". He spends days at sea hunting, and days on Soay struggling in "mountains of soft cold flesh and entrails". To get at the liver, it is necessary to cut deeply and quickly across the belly, so that an "avalanche of liver and entrails" rushes out. "Once I was not quick enough," writes Maxwell, "and was knocked flat on myback and enveloped by it, struggling free drenched in oil and blood, with a feeling almost of horror." Of that grotesque sentence, it is the word "almost" that is most disturbing. How far all this is from today's ethically well-intentioned nature writing. How far, too, from the widespread perception of Maxwell as a man who lived in harmony with the wild world. Harpoon is about blood and bone and blades and ledger-books; about how chunks of shark flesh continue to quiver eerily for hours after death, even if the "entire fore-part of the head" has been severed with a hatchet. Which is what makes it, and pretty much everything Maxwell wrote, so fascinating. His books represent – in their psychodramas and their ultraviolence – the dark side of British place-literature. To read them as hymns to tranquillity is trite. To engage with their tangled understories is mesmerising. Alongside them I would place TH White's The Goshawk and JA Baker's The Peregrine, which reads – in its obsessive tallying of body parts, bloodstains and kill paths – like an ornithological CSI. Appartient à la série éditoriale
A shark fishery based on the tiny Hebridean island of Soay was the beginning of Gavin Maxwell's enduring love affair with the west coast of Scotland. This, his first book, tells the whole story - the challenge and drama of the shark hunt, the development of catching techniques and equipment, the men who worked with him and some of the frustrations of starting a new enterprise in post-war Scotland. Every chapter is packed with action and anecdote. In each there are also beautifully observed descriptions of sky, sea and the individual islands of the Hebrides as well as their wildlife - from gannets, puffins, Manx shearwaters and fulmars to seals, dolphins and whales. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)639.2731Technology Agriculture & related technologies Hunting, fishing, conservation Commercial fishing, whaling, sealingClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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