Pre-Read Notes:
It's a crime that changed forever how we think about murder and cannibalism in survival situations. Also, being at sea is one of my favorite settings for horror. This book may be nonfiction but it's still also horror! And very well researched so far!
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what a wild story omg!
"[...I]n the face of this categorical opposition from his able seaman and his first mate’s less defined objection, Dudley reluctantly backed down. “So let it be,” he replied, “but it is hard for four to die, when perhaps one might save the rest.”" p55
"If the men in the Mignonette lifeboat survived, they would be notorious as cannibals for eating Parker’s flesh, but it would be the killing of Parker, rather than the eating of him, that would be the far weightier transgression— and the one that would have the most fateful consequences for them." p69
Final Review
(thoughts & recs) I have complicated feelings after reading this. It's brilliant in form, a potent blend of horror elements and well-researched and -organized nonfiction. It's also fascinating legal history -- a single case of cannibalism at sea helped forever change the way the law thinks about cannibalism in survival situations.
I recommend this to readers who enjoy obscur history, history of horror, and stories of being at sea.
My Favorite Things:
✔️ "Like seawater, urine has high salt levels that can exacerbate dehydration. It also contains waste products and toxins. Urine drinking can also take a psychological toll. As one handbook on emergency medicine warns, drinking urine “will destroy a person’s will to survive and hasten their death.”" p48 I read a lot of nonfiction like this, about dark topics that are still part of everyday human life. Like being at sea. I truly think the most horrible thing that can happen to a person is to be stranded at sea. And this is why -- so thirsty and so many posisons at hand that look like water.
✔️ "[N]ights held the greatest terror. Dudley recalled how the men dreaded “the sky coming dark.” Drifting on the black ocean, they had no way of knowing whether a storm, shark, or other peril loomed. “Our nights were the worst time,” Stephens recalled . “They seemed never to end; we dreaded them very much.”" p50 Just when I think there couldn't possibly be any way to make these men's plight any worse, and then the author remind me of the seemingly simple darkness.
✔️ This book is about being stranded at sea but it includes short histories on so many fascinating and unexpected subjects-- like the drawing of lots. And the custom of the sea.
✔️ "The taboo against eating human flesh and blood is not a product of a particular culture or religious tradition or historical era. It seems to stem from more primitive feelings . Cannibalism evokes not just shame and guilt but a more visceral, even primordial, reaction: disgust." The sociological aspects of this book are interesting and help emphasize how extreme it is to give in to cannibalism, no matter what the situation. p62
Content Notes: sharks, shipwreck, being at sea, being lost, being stranded, starvation and malnutrition, extreme thirst, drinking seawater, murder, blood, cannibalism, violence against animals, animal death, sinking
Thank you to Adam Cohen, Author's Equity, and NetGalley for an accessible digital arc of CAPTAIN'S DINNER. All views are mine.