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Cook : The Extraordinary Voyages of Captain James Cook |  | Author: Nicholas Thomas Publisher: Walker & Company
List Price: $28.00 Buy New: $3.98 as of 3/18/2010 15:23 CDT details You Save: $24.02 (86%)
New (6) Used (17) Collectible (1) from $3.98
Seller: oceanwavebooks Rating: 20 reviews Sales Rank: 658870
Media: Hardcover Pages: 468 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 9.7 x 6.2 x 1.7
ISBN: 0802714129 Dewey Decimal Number: 910.92 EAN: 9780802714121 ASIN: 0802714129
Publication Date: September 1, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Commonly regarded as the greatest sea explorer of all time, James Cook made his three world-changing voyages during the 1770s, at a time when ships were routinely lost around the English coast. He made history by making geography-- sailing through previously unknown southern seas, charting the eastern Australian coast and circumnavigating New Zealand, putting many Pacific islands on the map, and exploring both the Arctic and Antarctic. His men suffered near shipwreck, were ravaged by tropical diseases, and survived frozen oceans; his lieutenants-- including George Vancouver and William Bligh-- became celebrated captains in their own right. Exploits among native peoples combined to make Cook a celebrity and a legend.
Cook is not, however, viewed by all as a heroic figure. Some Hawaiians demonize him as a syphilitic rascist who had a catastrophic effect on local health. Indigenous Australians often see him as the violent dispossessor of their lands. Nicholas Thomas explores Cook's contradictory character as never before, by reconstructing the many sides of encounters that were curious and unusual for Europeans and natives alike. The result of twenty years' research, Thomas's magnificently rich portrait overturns the familiar images of Cook and reveals the fascinating and far more ambiguous figure beneath.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 20
Cook : The Extraordinary Voyages of Captain James Cook February 17, 2010 Gerald Greenfield (Richland, WA USA) This is a blow by blow of all three round-the-world voyages James Cook made in the 18th century. I find it much easier to read than the original material which the author often quotes. Our language today, at least in America, is not as "foreign" as English in England in the 18th century. The author makes relatively deep ananlyses of the various cultures Cook and his men ran into during his travels. For example, he had long stays at Tonga and Tahiti, so he became close to many of those islands' people. He also had artists on all his journeys, and they conveyed much visual graphics of the people and their residences. The book is only a couple of years old, so the author compares some current descriptions of various elements of culture and places to help the modern reader understand what Cook and his crew experienced. I highly recommend Cook to anyone interested in early exploration of the South Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. A good follow-on book is Stephen Bown's "Madness, Betrayal, and the Lash," a description of Captain George Vancouver's trip to the Pacific Northwest in search for the Northwest Passage. Vancouver served on Cook's last voyage, and made a short trip with Cook to the Northwest. I found Vancouver's trips interesting. I'm familiar with most of the geography and places he describes and became fascinated with what he found and what today we know was just out of his reach. I've lived on the West Coast of America most my life and found the author's descriptions to be interesting when compared to what I see today.
Danger plot give-away: Cook bad, natives good October 12, 2009 J. Cote (Toronto, Canada) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Perhaps the title should have been a hint - Simply "Cook", no Captain. Within pages this guy had me bored by his unimaginative noble savage approach. He does not appear to really know very deeply the social, political and intellectual world in which Cook lived, either. This is the first book about the great Captain Cook, an unassuming hero and superachiever, that I have ever found just too boring to finish. The axe grinding is just too much. For heaven's sake, if you've never read anything about Captain Cook, don't make this the first. Probably just stay away from anything written by this author, who in my opinion is a good example of "a man hears what he wants to hear and disregards the rest".
Reading this book more difficult than Cook's voyages April 11, 2009 Ken Bates (Boston) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
If you can speed read Shakespeare (DeVere) or king's english then you may consider submitting yourself to the tedious, convoluted and tortuous language that was a torture to me.
Had Samuel Clemmens authored the accumulated details or the products of the author's research the comprehension would have been easier, yet still wanting the omission of trivial and boring details.
Captain Cook May 11, 2008 Todd Stockslager (Raleigh, NC) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
Fast-moving and fascinating account of Captain Cook's three around-the-world voyages, culminating in his death at the hands of Hawaiian peoples who apparently mistook him for a god based on his ill-timed arrival and departure schedule.
The concept of leaving on just one 3-year trip in uncharted lands so far from home and family and communication with them seems even more astounding and heroic today in the age of always available, always on communication. Of course, Cook and his crew weren't always heroes, displaying at times the reflexive racism and cultural arrogance of the age of Empire that spawned the exploration in the first place. However, it is interesting to watch Cook's attitudes change and mature during the voyages.
You may want to cross-reference to Tony Horwitz' Blue Latitudes: Boldly Going Where Captain Cook Has Gone Before which I also reviewed. Horwitz applies his witty and accessible style to a popular cultural, anthropological, historical, and gastronomical view of Cook's travel stops and his impact on them.
Fascinating account of Cook's voyages into the Pacific April 4, 2008 Jodi R. Thompson (NJ) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book covered Cook's 3 voyages into the Pacific. Cook's drive to explore new lands and interact with the people that he met along the way was fascinating. This book did not try to judge the actions of Cook and his crew, but rather chronicled the good and the bad, describing the various attitudes of several of the crew members as taken from their diaries and accounts of the voyages.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 20
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