null

Wake of the Whale, The / Alice Kinsella & Daniel Wade

Write a Review

Options

€25.50
Or

Description

It is a little-known fact that from 1908–1922, two Norwegian-owned whaling stations operated in

County Mayo, not far from the area that would be at the heart of the Corrib gas controversy a

century later.

 

Watcher has lived in Mayo most of her life. When she stumbles upon this fact she becomes, like

many before her, obsessed with the whales. Reflecting on colonialism and the climate crisis, she

asks, What is it that makes the men hunt them?

 

Mariner tries to answer this question. Through poetry influenced by medieval sagas and sea

shanties alike, he tells the story of not just of one whaling voyage, but of the history of

commercial whaling itself. He endeavours to give voice to the working Irish men of a community

since dissolved.

 

Together the authors weave a conversation that challenges our deeply ingrained assumptions

about human, and animal, nature.

 

A genre-bending book that blends history, poetry, and documentary, Wake of the Whale asks if

the attitudes that brought whales to the brink of extinction are now threatening our own?

 

Praise for Wake of the Whale

“An utterly brilliant and visual-physical-poetical exploration of the fate and mortal beauty of the

whale in Irish waters. All the pity and majesty of their existence, and ours, is laid bare in Alice

Kinsella’s dreamlike work which, like Melville’s Moby-Dick before it, defies all description and

arouses the deepest empathy.”

– Philip Hoare, author of Leviathan or, the Whale

 

“A lucid and enthralling exploration of whales and whaling, while also a poetic, personal journey.

Wake of the Whale is like no other book. Unpredictable and exciting as the sea, the pages

permeate every aspect of our culture, personal and political. Reading it is like being in an

enchanted dream. This is an important, enthralling and genre bending book.”

- Anja Murray, author of The Wild Embrace

 

“If we are to honour nature we need to confront the sins of the past.This bold and timely truth-

telling regarding Ireland’s less-than-honourable treatment of whales over the centuries feels like

a first step towards healing.”

– Manchán Magan, author of Listen to the Land Speak

 

“In this deeply moving and richly researched book, Alice Kinsella and Daniel Wade, uncover the

haunting and harrowing tale of our troubled relationships with an míol mór — our ancient sea

kin, the whale. Weaving together poignant threads of personal experience, fascinating archival

material, poetry and diverse knowledges, this book moves us to reconsider the deeply

interdependent relationship between humans and whales.”

– Dr Easkey Britton, author of Saltwater in the Blood and Ebb and Flow

 

“Kinsella and Wade’s magnificent new book extends the tradition of sea-shanty singers,

Melville’s classic novel, and a deep history of whaling as cultural practice into the 21st century.

Newsclips, archival photographs, poetry, and political challenges to preserving the

Anthropocene all fuse together to tell us an essential new tale from ‘the sea [that] has a

thousand spouts’.”

– Mark Nowak, author of Coal Mountain Elementary

 

About the authors

 

Alice Kinsella is a writer from Mayo. She is the author of poetry pamphlet Sexy Fruit (Broken

Sleep, 2018), and Milk: on motherhood and madness (Picador, 2023). She co-edited Empty

House: poetry and prose on the climate crisis (Doire Press, 2021). Her debut full-length poetry

collection, The Ethics of Cats, will be published in 2025. She is an Arts Council of Ireland Next

Generation Artist.

 

Daniel Wade is a writer from Dublin. In January 2017, his play The Collector opened the 20th

anniversary season of the New Theatre, Dublin. In January 2020, his radio drama Crossing the

Red Line was broadcast on RTÉ Radio 1 Extra. He is the author of the poetry collections

Iceberg Relief (Underground Voices, 2017), Rapids (Finishing Line Press, 2021), and the novel

A Land Without Wolves (Temple Dark Books, 2021).