Journey to the End of the Whale

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Journey to the End of the Whale
ISBN
0-297-84848-8

Journey to the End of the Whale (2005) is a novel by John David Morley, a book that almost killed its author in the making.[1][2]

Summary

Swiss orphan, insurance agent and amateur

whales
are bested by men in teak boats, harpooned by hand on the open sea.

Reception

Writing in The Observer, novelist and critic Adam Mars-Jones described the book as “a paean to the majesty, complexity and otherness of the world's whales; and an elegy for a way of life which depended on killing them.” In The Sunday Telegraph, Matthew Alexander wrote:

"It is impossible to do justice in this space to the rich spiritual-thematic explorations which Morley produces... The whale legends and ancient traditions of the islands, the submarine lives of giant mammals connected by sound-telepathy across vast tracts of ocean, the giant whale-stone which overhangs the bay in Lefó; from these and many more images and experiences emerges a poignant kind of personal spirituality which leads Daniel to a new understanding of his own humanity."[3]

"A marvellous and original work of fiction, which has not quite received all of the recognition it deserves" was the verdict of novelist and broadcaster Melvyn Bragg, who chose Journey to the End of the Whale as one of his 'Books of the year' in The Observer.[4] In The Observer magazine, Joe Holden concluded simply: “If ever a writer put his heart into a book, it is John David Morley.”[2]

Journey to the End of the Whale was shortlisted for the 2006 Commonwealth Writers' Prize in the Eurasia section.[5]

In Translation

In 2007, the novel was published in Spanish as Viaje al fin de las Ballenas in a translation by Mercedes Fernández Cuesta and Mario Grande.

References

  1. ^ ‘Now or never, and no second chance’, Richard Lim, The Straits Times (July 21, 2002)
  2. ^ a b 'The Prince of Whales', Joe Holden, The Observer Magazine (September 11, 2005)
  3. ^ ‘Follow the wake', Matthew Alexander, The Telegraph (October 16, 2005)
  4. ^ 'Books of the year', The Observer (November 27, 2005)
  5. ^ 'Commonwealth Writers' Prize Shortlist Announced' Archived 2014-03-26 at the Wayback Machine, The Commonwealth Secretariat (January 26, 2006)

External links