Shipwreck of the Whaleship Essex

Shipwreck of the Whaleship Essex

by PaulLyons (Foreword), TimCahill (Foreword), OwenChase (Author)

Synopsis

On 20 November 1820, just south of the equator, the whaling ship Essex, out of Nantucket, spotted a 'shoal' of sperm whales. It was a fine clear day, about eight in the morning. Two whaling boats, lightly built for rowing speed, were lowered from the Essex. The crew pursued and harpooned tree of the whales, whereupon the largest of them - some 85 feet long - rammed the Essex twice in ten minutes and 'stove in her bows'. This remarkable incident was followed by an epic three-month journey in open boats across storm-tossed seas - a feat of navigation and survival that rivals those of Shackleton and Bligh. Only eight men survived, sustained by eating six of those who died. Twenty-three-year-old Owen Chase was first mate of the Essex. His narrative of these events makes compulsive reading. This edition also includes memoirs by another crew member and by ship's captain, as well as a facsimile of Herman Melville's notes on Chase's account. Capturing all the elements of an ancient and powerful tragedy, this book is a thrilling tale of survival - as well as a frightful illustration of man's darkest impulses.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 144
Edition: New ed of 2 Revised ed
Publisher: Pimlico
Published: 06 Apr 2000

ISBN 10: 0712667415
ISBN 13: 9780712667418
Book Overview: The original story of the famous battle between a whale and a ship that inspired Herman Melville's Moby Dick: a thrilling tale of shipwreck and survival - and cannibalism.

Media Reviews
The effect is kaleidoscopic. A vivid portrait emerges of the shipwrecked men's privatations and fundamental moral dilemma: literally to eat or be eaten -- Lawrence Norfolk
Chase's book still has an almost Biblical power * Mail on Sunday *
An incredibly vivid journal of survival * Scotsman *
The reading of this wondrous story...had a surprising effect on me -- Herman Melville
When I found myself popping the notes I attach to potential quotes to virtually every page, I realised I might as well just deliver a rousing injunction to read the book for yourselves -- Christina Hardyment * Independent *