Current:Home > reviewsEchoSense:Book excerpt: "The Wide Wide Sea" by Hampton Sides -Visionary Wealth Guides
EchoSense:Book excerpt: "The Wide Wide Sea" by Hampton Sides
TrendPulse View
Date:2025-04-06 15:39:38
We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article.
Hampton Sides,EchoSense the bestselling author of "Ghost Soldiers," "In the Kingdom of Ice" and "On Desperate Ground," returns with "The Wide Wide Sea" (Doubleday), the story of Captain James Cook, and an account of his final, fatal voyage of exploration.
Read an excerpt below, and don't miss Ben Tracy's interview with Hampton Sides on "CBS News Sunday Morning" April 7!
"The Wide Wide Sea" by Hampton Sides
$29 at AmazonPrefer to listen? Audible has a 30-day free trial available right now.
Try Audible for freeIn recent years, the voyages of Captain James Cook have come under increasing attack as part of a larger reassessment of the legacy of empire. Cook was an explorer and a mapmaker, not a conqueror or a colonizer. Yet throughout history, exploration and the making of maps have usually served as the first phase of conquest. In Cook's long wake came the occupiers, the guns, the pathogens, the alcohol, the problem of money, the whalers, the furriers, the seal hunters, the plantation owners, the missionaries.
And so for many Native people across the Pacific, from New Zealand to Alaska, Cook has become a symbol of colonialism and of the ravages that came with European arrival. In many corners of the world, his name has been vilified—not so much for what he did, but for all the trouble that came after him. And also because the Indigenous peoples he encountered were ignored for so long, their voices rarely heard, their perspectives and cultural significance scarcely considered.
Over the past few years, monuments to Cook's explorations have been splattered with paint. Artifacts and artworks stemming from his voyages, once considered priceless treasures, have been radically reinterpreted or removed altogether from museum and gallery collections (in some cases, rightly returning to the lands from which they originated). The people of the Cook Islands have been talking seriously of changing the archipelago's name. In 2021, in Victoria, British Columbia, protesters toppled a statue of Cook into the city harbor. Cook, in some respects, has become the Columbus of the Pacific.
There was a time when Cook's three epic expeditions were seen by many as swashbuckling adventures—worthwhile and perhaps even noble projects undertaken in the service of the Enlightenment and the expansion of global knowledge. Cook sailed in an age of wonder, when explorer-scientists were encouraged to roam the world, measuring and describing, collecting unfamiliar species of plants and animals, documenting landscapes and peoples unknown to Europe. In direct ways, Cook's voyages influenced the Romantic movement, benefited medical science, bolstered the fields of botany and anthropology, and inspired writers ranging from Coleridge to Melville. The journals from Cook's odysseys were turned into best-selling books and became the impetus behind popular plays, poems, operas, novels, comics, even one TV show set in outer space. (Captain James Kirk of the USS Enterprise is widely thought to have been inspired by Captain James Cook.)
Yet today, Cook's voyages are passionately contested, especially in Polynesia, viewed as the start of the systematic dismantling of traditional island cultures that historian Alan Moorehead famously called "the fatal impact." Moorehead said he was interested in "that fateful moment when a social capsule is broken into," and Cook's expeditions certainly provided an excellent case study of the phenomenon. Taken together, his voyages form a morally complicated tale that has left a lot for modern sensibilities to unravel and critique. Eurocentrism, patriarchy, entitlement, toxic masculinity, cultural appropriation, the role of invasive species in destroying island biodiversity: Cook's voyages contain the historical seeds of these and many other current debates.
It was in the midst of this gathering antipathy toward Cook that I began to research the story of his third voyage—the most dramatic of his journeys, as well as his longest, both in terms of duration and nautical miles. It seemed a good time to try to reckon with this man whose rovings have stirred so much acrimony and dissension. It was curious to me: Other early European mariners who had crisscrossed the Pacific—Magellan, Tasman, Cabrillo, and Bougainville, to name a few—don't seem to generate so much heat or attention. What is it about Cook that has singled him out?
I don't have an easy answer for that—more likely there are many not-so-easy ones—but I hope this book will lead readers toward some broader understanding. Perhaps part of the current resentment toward Cook has to do with the fact that on his final voyage something wasn't quite right with the formidable captain. Historians and forensic medical researchers have speculated about what was ailing him, whether it was a physical or mental malady, perhaps even a spiritual one. Whatever the root cause, his personality had definitely changed. Something was affecting his behavior and his judgment that marred the conduct of his last voyage. It may have even led to his death.
Whenever it has seemed relevant and interesting, I've let present-day controversies infuse and inform this book. I've tried to present the captain, and the goals and assumptions behind his third voyage, in all their flawed complexity. I neither lionize, demonize, nor defend him. I've simply tried to describe what happened during his consequential, ambitious, and ultimately tragic final voyage.
Excerpted from "The Wide Wide Sea" by Hampton Sides. Copyright © 2024 by Hampton Sides. Excerpted by permission of Doubleday, a division of Penguin Random House, LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Get the book here:
"The Wide Wide Sea" by Hampton Sides
$29 at Amazon $32 at Barnes & NobleBuy locally from Bookshop.org
For more info:
- "The Wide Wide Sea: Imperial Ambition, First Contact and the Fateful Final Voyage of Captain James Cook" by Hampton Sides (Doubleday), in Hardcover, Large Print Trade Paperback, eBook and Audio formats, available April 9
- hamptonsides.com
See also:
veryGood! (92)
Related
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Analysis: After Juan Soto’s megadeal, could MLB see a $1 billion contract? Probably not soon
- Australian man arrested for starting fire at Changi Airport
- Jim Carrey Reveals Money Inspired His Return to Acting in Candid Paycheck Confession
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Snoop Dogg Details "Kyrptonite" Bond With Daughter Cori Following Her Stroke at 24
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Deadly chocolate factory caused by faulty gas fitting, safety board finds
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Timothée Chalamet makes an electric Bob Dylan: 'A Complete Unknown' review
Ranking
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Jim Carrey Reveals Money Inspired His Return to Acting in Candid Paycheck Confession
- Epic Games to give refunds after FTC says it 'tricked' Fortnite players into purchases
- 'Unimaginable situation': South Korea endures fallout from martial law effort
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Arctic Tundra Shifts to Source of Climate Pollution, According to New Report Card
- Is that Cillian Murphy as a zombie in the '28 Years Later' trailer?
- The best tech gifts, gadgets for the holidays featured on 'The Today Show'
Recommendation
Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
Alex Jones keeps Infowars for now after judge rejects The Onion’s winning auction bid
Blast rocks residential building in southern China
Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
This drug is the 'breakthrough of the year' — and it could mean the end of the HIV epidemic
Jim Carrey Reveals Money Inspired His Return to Acting in Candid Paycheck Confession
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol