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‘A babel of eerie sounds’

An elegiac mood in tension with hope
by Felicity Plunkett
May 2024, no. 464

Deep Water: The world in the ocean by James Bradley

Hamish Hamilton, $36.99 pb, 464 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

On the surface, this encyclopedic work offers a gloriously lyrical exploration of the sea. It could be part of a recent shoal of books about the more-than-human world, limning the wondrous and astonishing. In Deep Water: The world in the ocean, whales learn rhyme-like patterns to remember their songs, a ‘babel of strange, eerie sounds: skittering blips, long cries, whoops and basso moans’. A loggerhead turtle travels more than 37,000 kilometres to return to her birthplace. Sharks’ chemo-receptors prove acute enough to detect blood ‘in amounts as low as one part in a million’. Port Jackson sharks socialise with their peers, and evidence emerges that some fish species use tools.

 


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Deep Water: The world in the ocean by James Bradley

Hamish Hamilton, $36.99 pb, 464 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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