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jessiesummers's review against another edition
3.0
I get why people probably love it, but it just wasn’t my bag. I think the audiobook narrator is 10/10 and the writing itself is pretty good, but it didn’t change for me my general disinterest in sea stories. I know why it has to be written from an objective point of view (when recounting history), but it felt somewhere in between the longest research paper I’ve ever read and the never ending text crawl at the beginning of the Star Wars films.
badlydrawnroy's review against another edition
challenging
informative
medium-paced
5.0
Informative but never at the expense of being a great read.
trinityb2021's review against another edition
1.5
1.5 ⭐️
I rarely enjoy non-fiction. This is unfortunately NOT an exception.
In the books defense, I’ve never been a big fan of pirate stories or seafaring adventures. This is just a more boring version of a lot of those.
I like David Grann because he novelizes a real event and makes it feel like a story. This was definitely a story. Just not a story I cared about.
The exploration of human desperation and the lengths they’ll go to survive was interesting. It was dark, but it was the most engaging part of the book.
Again, this is actually a very good book. It just isn’t a topic I care about. 😬
carlitorum's review against another edition
adventurous
challenging
informative
inspiring
tense
medium-paced
3.75
closejack's review against another edition
5.0
Earlier this year I read the first book in very long Aubrey & Maturing series by Patrick O'Brian, Master and Commander. Despite being lost with all the terminology for a good portion of that book, I was completely drawn into characters and the period. I fully intend to read more of the series. Patrick O'Brian wrote a novel called 'The Unknown Shore' in 1959 before the Aubrey & Maturin series, this story follows the lives of two crew members aboard the Wager, I haven't read this book however as described in The Wager by David Grann, that book acted as a bit of a prototype for his big series.
I picked up The Wager for £1.60 at a charity shop. It had been on my list for a while and I couldn't resist the bargain. I then proceeded to consume this book in just over a week (quick for my normal pace!). Such a compelling and thrilling read!
The amount of research into the story of The Wager that David Grann has done is astounding and made even more impressive by his excellent and approachable storytelling. The story of The Wager has it all from dramatic storms, murder, shipwrecks and mutiny. I'm not normally very good with non-fiction books but this completely absorbed me.
The detail of naval life in this period was fascinating and also provides a nice foundation of knowledge for the Patrick O'Brians series. I think it's easy to romanticise these storys with tales of great battles and treasures but this book brings a more real side to that. A side that at times, had elements of horror with the lives of these people that struggled on the ships, sailing in harsh conditions and again when shipwrecked on an island.
Time to explore other David Grann works...
I picked up The Wager for £1.60 at a charity shop. It had been on my list for a while and I couldn't resist the bargain. I then proceeded to consume this book in just over a week (quick for my normal pace!). Such a compelling and thrilling read!
The amount of research into the story of The Wager that David Grann has done is astounding and made even more impressive by his excellent and approachable storytelling. The story of The Wager has it all from dramatic storms, murder, shipwrecks and mutiny. I'm not normally very good with non-fiction books but this completely absorbed me.
The detail of naval life in this period was fascinating and also provides a nice foundation of knowledge for the Patrick O'Brians series. I think it's easy to romanticise these storys with tales of great battles and treasures but this book brings a more real side to that. A side that at times, had elements of horror with the lives of these people that struggled on the ships, sailing in harsh conditions and again when shipwrecked on an island.
Time to explore other David Grann works...
paperback_whiplash's review against another edition
adventurous
informative
medium-paced
5.0
The novel seeped into my subconscious. The night I started reading it I had a vivid dream about being stuck in a storm like the Wager crew.
I've never read a non-fiction novel pre-1900s and I've realised how much I'm missing. I've highlighted so much in this book I want to look into more.
A bit that will stick with me the longest will be the distressing depictions of the crew suffering from scurvy. I was eating fruit at the time (coincidence) and I thought to myself "wow I really need to eat more fruit just in case".
I've never read a non-fiction novel pre-1900s and I've realised how much I'm missing. I've highlighted so much in this book I want to look into more.
A bit that will stick with me the longest will be the distressing depictions of the crew suffering from scurvy. I was eating fruit at the time (coincidence) and I thought to myself "wow I really need to eat more fruit just in case".
"so misrable was the scene, thats words cannot express the misery that some of the men died in." And those who were alive were nearly indistinuisable from the dead The disease had consumed not only the bonds that glued together the seaman's bodies but their vessels' companies.
The passage then goes on to talk about how so many men died so quickly, they couldn't keep up and the rats were eating the bodies. So yeah, a bit bleak.
Also, after you read The Wager, look up Wager Isle on Google Maps then check out the reviews for a bit of a chuckle.
kikiandarrowsfishshelf's review against another edition
4.0
Disclaimer: I received an ARC via Netgalley.
Oh, a new David Grann book! Happy Day.
Grann’s new book details the lost of the battleship The Wager and the struggle for survival that the crew endured. It’s like Lord of the Flies meets Mutiny on the Bounty meets Swiss Family We Don’t Know Anything. The crew of the Wager was part of a group of ships that were tasked with capturing a Spanish treasure ship. The Wager sinks shortly after passing Cape Horn, eventually sinking off the coast of Chile. After making it to an island, the group eventually ruptures and a mutiny occurs.
Part of the issue that Grann addresses are the conflicting stories – that of David Cheap, the captain of the ship when it went down, and that of John Bulkley, the gunner. Bulkley contends that the mutiny was justified while Cheap, of course, felt quite differently.
What Grann does, however, isn’t just focus on the actual mutiny and following trial but on the various class and imperialistic pressures that lead up to the circumstances of the mutiny. Part of the reason why the man were on the ship to begin with had to do with the imperialistic desires of not just Britain but Europe as a whole – why else send a fleet to travel the globe just to hunt down one ship. But it is also class – should Buckley have the same right of speech, of story that Cheap would? Additionally, there is the sad tale of the only black man on the ship, a man that was lost to history for a variety of factors - imperialism and racism being the primary to.
What is also addressed is the treatment of indigenous populations by the British in particular, and Imperial powers in general. When the crew of the Wager is stranded on a smile island, one of the difficulties they have is getting food. When an indigenous tribe shows up, the British accept the much needed help but also look down up the tribe, even though the tribe’s help was necessary for the group’s survive. It is no surprise the tribe left in the midnight of the night after having enough.
It is to Grann’s credit that while he does seem a bit more partial to Buckley, he presents the various viewpoints and sides of the Mutiny. The reader is given information about Cheap, enough that Cheap does and is not the stereotypical Captain Bligh of the movies. Perhaps the crewman that Grann must feels for is Byron, grandfather of the poet, and not even twenty when he leaves on the ship. He goes from boy to man over the course of events, and it is voice and his struggle in terms of morality that resonates the most with the reader. That and the lost story of the black crewman – John Duck who had actually managed to escape not only the wreck and the island to reach Buenos Aires, and then collided with the stark reality of a imperialistic Spain.