A journey into the wonders of the Great Barrier Reef, as experienced by explorers, scientists, and artists
The Great Barrier Reef is the most spectacular marine environment on earth, a true wonder of the world. Yet the history of our encounters with it has long been elusive. In The Reef, the acclaimed historian and explorer Iain McCalman recounts in full the dramatic story of the reef and the people who have been captivated by it for two centuries. The Reef is a narrative told through the lives of twenty intrepid souls, from Captain James Cook and his voyage across a mysterious coral maze to the world’s leading reef scientist, John “Charlie” Veron, whose personal mission is to rescue the reef from catastrophe. The extraordinary individuals in the book—not only explorers and scientists but also beachcombers, photographers, divers, and indigenous peoples and the castaways they adopted—were drawn to the reef for different reasons, but all shared one a passion for this vast coral country. As McCalman explores how the reef has been seen variously as a labyrinth of terror, a nurturing heartland, a scientific challenge, and a fragile global wonder, he argues that it is only by combining science and art that we will truly appreciate how this great gift of nature has shaped us and why it demands our attention. A classic work of romantic history, blending cutting-edge science with personal reflection and gorgeous images, The Reef is a beautiful book that will speak to broad audiences for years to come.
Iain McCalman is professor of history and the humanities at the University of Sydney. He has published numerous books and journal articles. His latest book, The Reef: A Passionate History, from Captain Cook to Climate Change, was published in Australia and the USA. Beyond his research, he has been an historical consultant and narrator for the BBC, ABC and other TV and film documentaries. His interest areas are the history of western environmental and cultural crises; scientific voyaging, ethnography and environmentalism and is currently the co-director at the Sydney Environment Institute.
This book gives a swirl of human stories that ebb in and out across the oceanscape. Most of these accounts are full of pain, fear, or desperation, where lives have been tested or broken on the reefs, or broken people have found refuge, healing, and wonder of this glorious environment. As the rise of ocean temperatures and acidity threatens to erase this whole foundation of life, McCalman makes one of the finest appeals for love in the whole literature of human relations with nature.
One of the most beautiful wonders on earth and the coral reefs and fish were amazing! Unfortunately, due to climate change, the warmer sea waters are bleaching and killing the coral. I wish I had read this book before I went to Australia because it is a fascinating history of the reef. I just wish more people could see it before it will be gone forever.
This is not my usual genre and I am not very scientific, but I loved reading this book. The author has written twelve chapters, each of which deal with a different human encounter with the Great Barrier Reef, beginning with Captain Cook. The brutality of the early stories especially intermingle the human voracity for cruelty and greed with the beautiful and treacherous reef - both have violent consequences for people. Stories of strandings, shipwrecks and survivals stranger than fiction amazed me, and they were written in an unembellished, campfire sort of tone - I could have just kept on reading. Despite the fascinating stories, the unembellished truths about what happened to the indigenous peoples, and their ways of life, was profoundly heartbreaking. I knew what had happened of course, but these accounts felt deeply personal, and the sense of injustice and loss was palpable. The author's descriptions of the symbiosis between the people, creatures, and place was the most vivid I have read in any other fiction or nonfiction. There is a real pride and respect in the book for the original inhabitants of the reef country, and a genuine sadness he didn't get to learn from them. The absolute otherworldly beauty of the reef, the savagery of human contact, the sheer, bloody-minded ambition that drove exploration, and the desperate need to protect this incredible place is a lot to get into twelve chapters, but this book will take you on a rollicking, great, terrible, wonderful adventure through all of it. Highly recommended, even if the genre's not normally your thing.
I have a passion for natural history, so this fine book by Iain McCalman really appealed to me. It’s very interdisciplinary, so it’s not just a book about the largest reef system in the world–Australia’s Great Barrier Reef. McCalman also delves into zoology, botany, geology, meteorology, besides human history, biography, and economics. Generally, he covers the history of the discovery of the reef system and the theories about it chronologically, from Captain Cook getting stuck in the middle of it for weeks to the days of settlement, and finally speculation on the very possible extinction of the reef. Besides Captain Cook, there are also other luminaries of science who make an appearance in The Reef: the great botanist Joseph Banks, Charles Darwin and his subsidence theory of reef development, and Charlie Veron, perhaps the great reef scientist ever. But the best stories are those about the formerly unknown reef lovers like the back-to-nature couple Ted and Bertha Banfield, who lived in a shack along the reef for six years and later became famous for writing a bestselling book, The Confessions of a Beachcomber, in 1907. McCalman,a historian and explorers, weaves the science and the people together seamlessly into a fascinating book.
In my very short history of reading there are few books that ive seen and wanted to read at first glance. Perhaps it was the cover of corals with that signature font they all use in scientific papers but i was hooked.. cheesy ass pun
This book I feel is critical in understanding the history of conservation and is the reason fields like ecology and adjacent environmental sciences in general are studied, funded and talked about til this day.
Before reading this i was unaware of the domino effect reef conservation had on the world forever more. Australias great barrier reef is the FIRST cases ever where naturalists and scientists combined to create a new genre of conservationist and stewards of nature. A group of people so passionate about the world around them that they dedicated their life to saving it.
A large segment of this book touches on the importance of journalism and the miscommunication & misinterpretation that followed european colonization of aboriginal lands. It touches on the role of modern jornalists to tell stories and inspire conversation that relay real life experiences and create long lasting bonds with the environment and eachother. The preservation of land and people as one.
Without the « mindful forward thinking » journalists of 1909´s England, France, Germany and New Wales (modern day Australia) no one would know of our sevenths wonder of the world, and the great barrier reefs limestone skeletons would have been exploited for industrial fertilizer or dredging for commercial use before modern day aus was established. It also introduces the question of other natural sites destroyed or degraded that have been lost to history.
The only reason we have our reefs today, or natural/state/parks in general is because people were willing to share their story.
Its easy to go on with you life, its easy to not notice or pay attention to something that feels so far away or that youve never personally connected with. Its harder to step out of your comfort zone, to expose yourself to the tides, or to feel the wind on your face and the boom of crashing waves around you.
Modern day gaza is just one example of the importance of activism and the rights of people to their ancestral homes and environment.
Its important to tell your story, and more so to speak it truthfully and with your whole heart.
In the age of information its even more crucial to be mindful of what you consume and put out there,because it just might happen that you and your neandrethal brain may change the world for the rest of eternity.
In 2001 the author, a historian, got the enviable chance to act as crew on a ship as part of a re-enactment of The Endeavor's historical journey through the northern great barrier reef, up to Cooktown (as it is today) where captain Cook stopped for repairs. While the BBC show sounds uninspiring, it did trigger in McCalman an awe and deep fascination in the GBR that led to him writing this book.
The Reef; a passionate history, reads ultimately as a tribute to the GBR by someone who fell under its spell in a most unique way. Resulting in a unique book as the author made a conscious decision to write this passionate history using his own knowledge and skill set rather than trying to follow the more common roads of photography or interviewing expert biologists. Thus we have a book about the reef that deals with it's colonial history, the stories of the individuals involved in bringing the reef to the wider world and to a certain extent, stories of the original tribes who lived along it.
Initially, I found this tactic disconcerting, as I was expecting a book that was more about the actual biology of the reef and it took me a while to get into it and a long time to read it; I won't lie, for a large portion I was rating it three stars in my head, then it crept up to four and by the end I was enjoying it so much that I wanted to turn around and start over when I got to the end.
The book is separated into three sections, and they are on a time line, at least roughly. In the first section we follow Cook as he tried to navigate the reef and escape being fatally wrecked upon it. We then meet Flinders, who mapped it again. Both are stories I have read before, but because this was focusing on the GBR, it was already my favorite bit and it was presented in a different way to anything I had read before.
We then progress to other individual stories; Dunk Island, Eliza and her unlikely stories of cannibals, shipwrecked Europeans who came to live with Aboriginal and Torre Strait island tribes and much much more. The story of the early explorations of the reef were riveting, as were the descriptions of the tribes that lived around what is now Townsville. I adored the final chapter about Veron, (The god of corals for us undergraduates), and the mention of my old lecturer Terry Hughes who was approaching coral god-hood himself.
A word about the style of writing; I found it clear and richly informative. It is such a relief to find a book that has a wide vocabulary, has been well written, well edited and reads with the polish of someone who makes their livelihood from using the English language as it ought to be used. I found the descriptive powers formidable, though often slightly detached and that detachment brought into sharp clarity the moments where the author feels strongly about his subject matter.
Because the book essentially consists of twelve different stories each with a different subject matter, the narrative did not start tying together for me until the final section. However tie together it does and so efficiently that I was left with a new sense of wonder and glory in the reef.
Despite having dived it, studied it, read about it, been breathless from it's beauty and miserably wet and cold on it over the years, despite the fact that it has been my unrequited passion for so long and despite not liking this book all that much to begin with.....
At the end I found myself completely won over by this new way of experiencing it, through individuals that have helped make the reef what it is for us today. I feel as though a whole new dimension of the Great Barrier Reef has opened up for me through this book, which I will thoroughly recommend to anyone who loves the GBR, colonial history, wants to know more about North Queensland or just appreciates a very well written historical story.
McCalman is a superlative storyteller (Darwin's Armada may be the perfect science history), and the reef is one of my Alltime Favourite Things Ever, so this was a hotly anticipated read. As expected, it is readable and gorgeous, full of larger than life characters, and the simple take-your-breath away beauty, depth, diversity and wonder of the GBR saturates the volume. I wouldn't hesitate to recommend the book.
But. Ah, the but. The format of short stories doesn't show off McCalman at his best. Firstly, his method for structuring the stories becomes noticeable reading several in a row, and being able to glance the scaffolding cuts into the pleasure of the experience a little. It's easy to start to feel a little manipulated after a while.
Secondly, the format doesn't allow a lot of space to explain some of the science. McCalman is determined to tell stories that capture not only the science, but the emotional invoked by the reef, and hence resists organising chapters around concepts - like the debates about geology, or the slow realisation of the symbiotic relationships of coral polyps and algea, and it's significance. This can make the science confusing. The chapter dealing with competing explanations for the formation of reef geologies was frankly a mess, skipping so much detail (the differences between atoll reefs and the GBR for starters) that it was nonsensical without more background. The inter-familial and community tensions that dominate the narrative are fascinating, but the whole thing feels like it needs three times the space to really hang together.
I understood what McCalman is trying to capture. I'll never forget my first encounter with the reef, and I have no words better than those of others quoted in the book, particularly Judith Wright's "I fell in love." The writing at times fulfills it's holistic mission beautifully, capturing the passion that is evoked by the reef. McCalman's writing about Wright is evocative and beautiful, his description of William Kent's love affair with the GBR captures a sense of time and space, and McCalman's unpicking of the legends of coral island castaways - and especially what it told of relationships between indigenous groups and encroaching white settlers - is totally compelling.
The final chapters, which detail the ridiculous number of human-generated things about to destroy the reef as we know it, are suitably distressing. But McCalman also manages to capture the reef's history of beating the odds, and a strange sense that if there ever was a candidate for miracles, this may be it. It left me feeling better than when I started, and that is saying something.
Tackling the history of the Great Barrier Reef is obviously an enormous task, but I've read some similarly ambitious books recently that were very well done. Simon Winchester's books on the Atlantic and Pacific are the gold standard, and Jack Davis' history of the Gulf of Mexico was also fantastic. The Reef is merely very good, and I really liked parts of it.
It's a bit anecdotal on the beginnings of European exploration by Cook and Flinders and uses those first navigators, along with the occasional castaway, to also poke around the aboriginal history of Eastern Australia. As usual, the Aboriginals find themselves marginalized by wild tales of cannibalism and violence as an excuse for Europeans to push them aside in the name of progress.
It was interesting to see how true biological research has only been truly ongoing for about 100 years, and it seems things didn't get serious until the 60's and 70's. The Reef barely avoided total exploitation by oil companies in the late 60's, in fact, when an ugly spill in Santa Barbara finally made Australians realize they were about the sell their greatest natural feature for certain ruin.
The best chapter by far was the final one about the godfather of the Reef, Charlie Veron. His story, briefly presented, was so powerful that I immediately added his books for a follow up list.
Good overall intro to the some of the human history of the Reef, although depressing that future generations may not get to enjoy much of what we've perhaps permanently screwed up due to rising ocean temps and acidity levels.
I read this while in Australia and traveling to the Reef, and it was the perfect reading-in-place experience. McCalman traces the history of changing scientific understanding of, and attitudes surrounding, the Great Barrier Reef from Captain Cook to the present. Each chapter focuses on an individual whose life intersected with, and helped shape perceptions of, the reef and region. Most of this was new to me, and fascinating. I was a bit disappointed that the histories of Aboriginal peoples and their longstanding relationships with the reef are only seen peripherally, always through white eyes, and not given their own space. Though I realize McCalman would be writing as an outsider to this history and might not feel it is his to tell, the effect is to position the Anglo-Australian view as the one that matters. Still, it's a good introduction to the history of a fascinating place.
“The Reef” was definitely a labor of love for Iain McCalman. It is in-depth stories from the European discovers and researchers of the Great Barrier Reef. This is a through work cataloging the main players in the history of the reef. It covers their relationship to the reef and their love/hate of it. It impressed me that from an early time (the mid-1800’s) it was realized how delicate the ecosystem of the reef is. Great read for anyone interested in this area. I thought this would be more about the reef and less about the life stories of (European) people associated with it.
I’m not much of a scientist, artist or historian, I just live in North Queensland with this magnificent reef on my doorstep.....I loved this book!! It wasn’t just history and science - it was adventure, bravery, conviction and understanding of real people surrounding the reef, the land and giving a better insight into the traditional ways of Australia’s first people. I’d recommend this book to anyone with even only a remote interest in its subject.
McCalman's history of the reef is bound up in a dozen stories told by explorers, castaways and scientists. He starts with James Cook's voyage in 1770, an adventure that almost ended in disaster on the then-largely unknown (to the white man) reef. He ends his compilation with a story about Australian scientist Charlie Veron, a premier specialist in coral reefs and predictor of doom if earthlings don't change its ways. In discovery and extinction he writes about the reef through the eyes of the experiences of Europeans and their descendants. We learn about charting the waters, the aboriginals, whose kindness was overtaken by outright lies of barbarous behavior, explorers who stood out for their efforts to understand the tribes and their ways, and ignorant bureaucrats who were determined to favour all kinds of commerce over preservation (sound familiar) and were fought by those who saw the reef different. McCalman's research for this tome was prodigious. The bibliography stretches over 8 pages in small type. I've made a note of several books to read next.
It feels quite poignant that I finished this the evening our government gave the go ahead for port development on the Great Barrier Reef. If the forecast of reef scientist Charlie Veron in grim final chapter of Iain McCalman's history of the Reef is correct, then this dredging and the subsequent coal exports from Queensland might not be a blow to the Reef, but a death knell.
That being said this is a quietly brilliant history of the Great Barrier Reef. McCalman builds his case slowly, lingering over biographical detail. Set around twelve characters, each impressively interlinked with previous and following, the book charts the history of the Reef from James Cook's first encounters to 20th Century environmental battles and scientific understanding. Indigenous Australians are given equal treatment, neither exoticised nor ignored. While never attempting to be a 'complete' history, this work rings emotionally complete.
I was thinking, for whatever reason, that this book would be a natural history of Australia's Great Barrier Reef, but until the last few chapters, it's more about the human history of the region, more about sailors and settlers than about scientists. The stories are interesting, and provided a good understanding of the history of the area around the reef and the culture clashes between European transplants and native Aborigines.
On a research trip about a dozen years ago, McCalman falls in love with Australia's Great Barrier Reef. In the ensuing years he puts together a comprehensive picture of the Reef - history, natives, artists, threats - and presents this book. The book is well researched and well written but one must really want to know about the Reef to get the full value of the writing. For me it was a bit much. Best parts were the historical writing, especially about Cook's exploration and Darwin's theory of the Reef's evolution. The book ends on a tragic note: global climate change and pollution are killing the Reef - we may see the Reef die in our lifetimes. Reversing or at least stabilizing climate change may enable the Reef to adapt. Hopeful but probably unlikely.
This book weaves together natural history, anthropology, marine biology, and rich biographies into a masterpiece that flows wondrously from cover to cover. I do not get as much time these days to read literature this rich, so immersing myself into the world of the Great Barrier Reef was exquisitely satisfying. I hope that the book leads many readers to care about the Reefs enough to work toward saving them from extinction, as we are saving ourselves from disaster. Ian McCalman is a master storyteller whose subjects spring to life from the pages, turned in very quick succession.
In twelve different stories, organised into chapters titled 'Terror', 'Nurture' and 'Wonder', Ian McCalman examines the history of the Great Barrier Reef since its discovery by Captain James Cook when his ship, the 'Endeavour' foundered on its shoals in 1770.
Since then, people have charted its waters; have been shipwrecked and taken in by the indigenous people; have wondered at its biodiversity and its creation; and are now trying to predict its future in the face of climate change and ever-increasing pressures of development.
A fascinating book about one of the wonders of the world.
Jain McCalman did an amazing job researching the material for this book and it is very well written. This book combines a history of the Great Barrier Reef along with a science lesson into the unique ecology and biodiversity found only on the Great Barrier Reef. Most importantly, this book is a wake-up call about climate change. However, at times, this book reads like a textbook and can be a bit challenging for someone who isn't really interested in learning about the history of the Great Barrier Reef.
This book is a story of encounters between Reef peoples and places, ideas, and environments, over more than two centuries, beginning with James Cook’s bewildered voyage through a coral maze and ending with the searing mission of reef scientist John “Charlie” Veron to goad us to act over the impending death of the Reef.
I enjoyed the thoughtful inclusion of women and indigenous people. In the end, it's a sobering tale that drives home the point that "coral reefs are the canaries of climate change." If you're interested in the Great Barrier Reef I would recommend this book.
Non-fiction is not really my bag but I did find a lot of interest in this book about Australia's Great Barrier Reef. The writer structures his material well, dealing with the history, the science and the people who have loved, lived in and sought to understand this natural wonder. He ends, not unexpectedly, with a warning that the dangers to the future of the Reef reflect dangers to the survival of the human race itself. But polemic does not dominate this work of research, respect and wonder.
Fantastic book. In telling the story of the Reef, Iain McCalman ends up telling a lot more about Australian history. Not restricted to post-European colonisation either, but covers indigenous history too, which is the real plus for me. I think every person should visit the reef - before it's too late - and every person who does should read this book. It's a perfect companion - telling incredible stories of an incredible place.
An interesting history, although it felt a bit patchy at times. I liked the idea of telling individual stories to make up the whole, but it made it feel like there were gaps. Also, it skimped on the Aboriginal history of the Reef. They were almost more like "supporting characters." While much of their story takes place before Cook arrived, it would have been nice to more focus on their perspectives, rather than simply how they interacted with Westerners.
Very informative read. The chapters are based on accounts taken from different perspectives - from James Cook’s expedition to today’s scientists and the research being done.
The most profound part is learning that “coral reefs are the canaries of climate change.”
Diving on the Great Barrier Reef has been one of the most exciting and memorable things I've ever done, so it's no surprise I found this a very good read, with a big caveat: it is by no means a history of the Great Barrier Reef in any kind of natural history sense, which is what I expected when I opened it. In fact, such natural history as McCalman does offer is not Great Barrier Reef-specific, really, but much more the history of coral reefs broadly (and that is quite interesting).
What this book is instead is a kind of cultural history of the Great Barrier Reef in the Anglo-Australian imagination. As someone much more comfortable with the humanities than with science, this is very much my kind of story, and McCalman tells it very well. His organizing principle is to focus each chapter on an individual or two, their encounters with the Reef, and the way those encounters shaped larger social and cultural understandings or the Reef and it's meaning. The narrative arc takes us from Capt. Cook's experiencing the Reef as an object of navigational terror through popular sensationalist narratives that painted the aboriginals of the Reef in imperialism's usual racist fashion (lots of lurid cannibalism, for example) to the ultimate embrace of the Reef as a natural wonder of great beauty and scientific importance. It ends on an elegiac note -- the Reef, and all reefs, are in danger from climate change -- yet is also hopeful and is clearly meant to rally reef lovers old an new to awareness and action. An excellent book that I'd recommend to anyone, but especially anyone visiting the Reef and northeastern Australia.
This is another case of the book not being quite what I expected.
I'd thought that this was a natural history of the Great Barrier Reef, with a look at the life that it supports. What this really turns out to be is a history of the white people who explored the reef and how they interacted with the people already living along the coast protected by the reef. This is a Eurocentric book because it sticks with primary sources from the white people who explored the reef with an eye for making it useful for themselves. The people who already lived there left almost no written records, and so they have almost no voice. The author does note that most of the accounts of the natives by Europeans were horribly distorted and sensational so that they would pique the public's interest and sell.
I was hoping for natural history and I got human history instead. The book is constructed as a series of case studies, each of which follows a (white) person as they encountered the Great Barrier Reef. These accounts range from Captain Cook in the 18th century all the way into the last 19th century, until they catch up with a couple of people who are trying to preserve the reef in the 20th century.
McCalman presents twelve stories to tell the history of the Great Barrier Reef. Some were more interesting than others, and in the end the book felt more like a detailed introduction to the Reef than a full history (which isn't a knock to it; it's a 280 page paperback, not a textbook). Knowing next to nothing about the Great Barrier Reef, I learned a lot reading this, and discovered some people and events which I would like to do more research on.
An excellent environmental history book told in a compelling style and way. It is a genre that is overlooked but bridges science, social science and adventure. This is a good example and there should be more.
The only reason I give this 4 stars and not 5 is that some sentences are a little unclear. I found myself having to check what or who is being referred to at multiple times during this book.