Overview
A natural and cultural history of the whale, long persecuted by humans but now celebrated throughout the world.Editorials
Globe and Mail
"A lively and lovely series. . . . This delightful series gives us animals as both alien and familiar. . . . An exhilarating, often astonishing and sometimes moving series of monographs."βGlobe and Mail
β Martin Levin
Magazine of the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society
"There's more to whales than watching them, and anyone who wants to should definitely get a copy of Whale by Joseph Roman. . . . A superb chronicle of the relationship between man and beast over the centuries. A must-buy."
Aquatic Mammals Journal
"Well-written, fascinating. . . . This reader was much satisfied by this tasty book. . . . It certainly belongs in museum bookshops from New Bedford, through Sandefjord, to Grytviken. It could be a more substantive alternative to the cetological trinkets and tee shirts purveyed to modern day whale-watchers as they disembark from their brief encounters with his subjects. If such punters then read it, they might gain a respect and understanding of the variety of attitudes that different nationalities and generations have had towards large whales since they and we first interacted."
Ocean Navigator
"Whale is a lyrical portrait of the animals that have a special place in the hearts and minds of every sailor."--Ocean Navigator
β Twain Braden
Globe and Mail
"A lively and lovely series. . . . This delightful series gives us animals as both alien and familiar. . . . An exhilarating, often astonishing and sometimes moving series of monographs."
Ocean Navigator
"Whale is a lyrical portrait of the animals that have a special place in the hearts and minds of every sailor."