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Reviews tagging 'Racism'
The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder by David Grann
81 reviews
kabibblekitsch's review against another edition
4.25
Graphic: Animal cruelty, Death, Gore, Gun violence, Racism, Slavery, Violence, Xenophobia, Blood, Murder, Abandonment, Alcohol, Colonisation, War, and Injury/Injury detail
Moderate: Animal cruelty, Cursing, Torture, Trafficking, War, and Classism
finnickdeservedbetter's review against another edition
4.0
Graphic: Death, Violence, Murder, and Injury/Injury detail
Moderate: Animal cruelty, Animal death, Gun violence, Blood, Cannibalism, and Pandemic/Epidemic
Minor: Confinement, Racism, Slavery, Abandonment, and Colonisation
nichoude's review against another edition
5.0
Graphic: Death, Gun violence, Violence, Murder, and War
Moderate: Racism, Cannibalism, Colonisation, and Injury/Injury detail
Minor: Slavery
ska1224's review against another edition
5.0
Graphic: Alcoholism, Animal cruelty, Animal death, Death, Gun violence, Racism, Slavery, Violence, Medical content, Murder, Abandonment, Alcohol, Colonisation, War, Injury/Injury detail, Classism, and Pandemic/Epidemic
Moderate: Cannibalism
Minor: Excrement and Religious bigotry
k80holmquist's review against another edition
4.5
Moderate: Body horror, Death, Racism, Medical trauma, Colonisation, War, and Injury/Injury detail
Minor: Animal cruelty, Animal death, Cannibalism, and Murder
slimepuppy's review against another edition
5.0
Also, this story is just insane? Everything was personally out to get those guys from day zero, and they refused to quit at every turn. Let this be a lesson that it's ok to quit! Lest you become David Cheap.
Graphic: Animal death, Death, Violence, Xenophobia, Blood, Colonisation, and Injury/Injury detail
Moderate: Body horror, Gore, Racism, Slavery, Cannibalism, War, and Classism
Minor: Genocide and Suicide
imijen's review against another edition
3.5
I'll be honest, I can sometimes find "survival stories" like this a bit tiresome to read. There's honestly only so many times you can read vivid descriptions of starvation, murder and mutilation, or how isolation and hunger send men insane, or the horrors of scurvy, or how some men simply have a superiority complex, thinking they know better than anyone else, even in a life or death situation, before you just feeling like yelling "Enough!".
But I did want to read this for many reasons. I wanted an insight into 1700s nautical society, and I was intrigued by the idea that conflicting accounts caused a legal nightmare on their return to England. Sadly, the vast majority of this book was the gruesome, survival tale stuff. I do appreciate how clear Grann was on his sourcing of first hand accounts, and how he even attempted to include people who are usually silenced, those who could not leave written accounts, such as the Kawésqar people. The narrative is clearly incredibly well researched and put together, but it's simply not something I loved reading about it.
After such a detailed retelling of the mens' shipwreck and their stranger-than-fiction returns to their homeland, I was then left surprised at just how rushed the end of the book felt. Simply, the parts I was most excited to learn about, the mens' return to England, the legal aftermath, and views of the burgeoning press, and the views of the wider society, views both on the men themselves and what they went through, felt very glossed over in comparison to the earlier parts of the book. That's a shame, in my opinion, because there was definitely a lot there for those of us that felt a bit deflated after reading about the hundredth gruesome death while castaway on an island. I'm sure there should have been more accounts of this period, not less, so it almost feels like perhaps these areas weren't as interesting to the author, and so he spent a lot less time on them. A shame and a bit of a let down.
I did learn many fascinating facts from this book, however. My favourite being just how many expressions and idioms that we still use today have their origin in this "age of sail":
"To “toe the line” derives from when boys on a ship were forced to stand still for inspection with their toes on a deck seam. To “pipe down” was the boatswain’s whistle for everyone to be quiet at night, and “piping hot” was his call for meals. [...] To “turn a blind eye” became a popular expression after Vice-Admiral Nelson deliberately placed his telescope against his blind eye to ignore his superior’s signal flag to retreat."
(Chapter 2: A Gentleman Volunteer)
A solid book with a lot of interesting history, but it kind of fizzled towards to end, and didn't quite live up to its promise.
Graphic: Death, Violence, Murder, and Colonisation
Moderate: Animal death, Racism, Slavery, and War
elenakperez's review against another edition
5.0
Graphic: Animal death, Chronic illness, Confinement, Death, Gore, Gun violence, Hate crime, Physical abuse, Racial slurs, Racism, Suicide, Torture, Violence, Blood, Excrement, Medical content, Kidnapping, Religious bigotry, Medical trauma, Abandonment, Alcohol, Colonisation, War, and Classism
Moderate: Cannibalism
Minor: Sexual harassment
frenchpants's review against another edition
3.75
Graphic: Murder
Moderate: Death, Suicidal thoughts, Abandonment, Alcohol, and War
Minor: Animal death, Racism, Cannibalism, and Colonisation
laurajeangrace's review against another edition
4.5
Graphic: Animal death, Death, Blood, Medical content, Medical trauma, Murder, and War
Moderate: Racism, Slavery, and Cannibalism