Roar of the Sea: Treachery, Obsession, and Alaska's Most Valuable Wildlife - Deb Vanasse - Books - Graphic Arts Books - 9781513209562 - March 17, 2022
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Roar of the Sea: Treachery, Obsession, and Alaska's Most Valuable Wildlife

Deb Vanasse

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Roar of the Sea: Treachery, Obsession, and Alaska's Most Valuable Wildlife

Featuring the real person who inspired Jack London's The Sea-Wolf, Roar of the Sea is a swashbuckling narrative of treachery and obsession involving pirates, fur seals, competing governments, and near war.

"Roar of the Sea vividly recreates one of the earliest battles between commerce and conservation: the struggle over the fate of the Pribilof Islands fur seals, once considered 'America's most valuable wildlife.' In this engrossing and timely book, Deb Vanasse shows how ego, ambition, and misinformation can collide with good science to the detriment of all-a lesson the world apparently still needs to learn."
-Gary Krist, author of The Mirage Factory and Empire of Sin

"Deftly told, Roar of the Sea is a tale of both historical importance and contemporary urgency. More than a hundred years ago in the remote Bering Sea, fur seals lurched toward extinction amidst an international culture of greed, piracy, and unconscionable brutality. Their only hope was a fiery naturalist who dared to stand up against the powers of his time. From the remarkable facts of life on a pair of far-flung islands to the perils of taking too much, this book teaches and transports, offering a poignant story of resistance that resonates today."
-Caroline Van Hemert, biologist and author of The Sun is a Compass

"The men who backed wholesale slaughter, the policy makers who argued that killing seals was the only way to save them, a sailing outlaw, and a naturalist whose self-sacrifice and persistence prevented an unnecessary extinction-it's all part of Deb Vanasse's wonderful Roar of the Sea, a detailed history important to all of us who love Alaska and the sea, who believe in conservation, and who look to the past to better understand the complexities of our modern world."
-Bill Streever, biologist and best-selling author of Cold and In Oceans Deep

"Roar of the Sea is a full-sail ride-brightly written and meticulously researched-about pirates, plunder, and a self-taught naturalist who challenged the onslaught to save a species of seals on a remote pair of islands in a distant sea. The world is made better by inspiring stories like this. Bravo, Deb Vanasse."
-Kim Heacox, author of The Only Kayak and Jimmy Bluefeather

"With dashing antiheroes, swashbuckling pirates, and adventures at sea, this vivid book is a rarity-an important piece of nonfiction chronicling a treacherous bit of history that reads like a keep-you-up-all-night page-turner. Vanasse is a gem."
-C. B. Bernard, author of Chasing Alaska: A Portrait of the Last Frontier Then and Now

Over a century ago, treachery in Alaska's Bering Sea twice brought the world to the brink of war. The US seized Canadian vessels, Great Britain positioned warships to strike the US, and Americans killed Japanese pirates on US soil, all because of the fur seals that crowded onto the tiny Pribilof Islands.

The herd's population plummeted while notorious seafarers like Alex MacLean poached indiscriminately. Enter an unlikely crusader to defend the seals: self-taught artist and naturalist Henry Wood Elliott, whose zeal and love for the animals inspired him to go against all odds and take on titans of the sea. Winning seemed impossible, and yet Elliott managed to expose corruption and set the course for modern wildlife protections that are all the more relevant today as the world grapples with mass extinction.

Carefully written and researched Roar of the Sea reveals the incredible hidden history of how one lone activist existing in the margins prevailed against national governments and corporate interests in the name of wildlife conservation.


280 pages

Media Books     Hardcover Book   (Book with hard spine and cover)
Released March 17, 2022
ISBN13 9781513209562
Publishers Graphic Arts Books
Pages 280
Dimensions 139 × 215 × 14 mm   ·   412 g
Language English  

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