I received this book as part of a Goodreads giveaway, and I'm glad I did; I found it fascinating. Initially, I was a bit thrown off when Vincent ended the Prologue with the suggestion that the whaling war 'sure as hell isn't about whales' (What?) but by the end of the book I understood; the battle is so, so complex, and yes, not always to do with whales.
The book is in three parts; the first is an attempt to understand the anti-whaling perspective, which involves Vincent joining the crew of the Sea Shepherd as they try to stop the Japanese whaling in Antarctic waters. After that, he goes to Japan explore the other side of the 'war', before heading to The Hague to witness an ICJ ruling on the situation.
From the very first chapter, I was forced to think about my own perspective, as Vincent seeks to answer why people (particularly Australians) are so against whaling, sometimes so strongly that the oppose it even when it's done in situations that are legal, sustainable and traditional. Some of the suggestions put forward to explain these opinions were eye-opening; do some people oppose whaling as a way to feel like they're doing the world good (by taking a stand against the slaughter of these defenseless creatures), without actually having to deal with anything closer to home (refugees, forestation)?
The explanations for the Japanese perspective were just as interesting, as was the revelation that Japanese people actually hardly ever eat whale meat. It was interesting to hear the different views of nature the two sides hold (Australians think nature is an unspoiled place, while Japanese see it as ready to tamed) and how Australia and Sea Shepherd have backed Japan into a corner and created a situation where Japan's politicians can't give up the costly practice without looking weak (so they don't).
I started this book somewhat opposed to whaling. I didn't like the idea of whales being slaughtered and bought into the idea that the scientific reasons for Japanese whaling were a sham. But I thought that with so many fish and other animals being taken from the ocean, maybe having too many whales there would throw the food chain out of balance (I've since learned that whale numbers are too low, not too high) so I thought that maybe Japan should be left alone.
Now, I would say I'm still relatively opposed to whaling, but I like to think my position is more educated.