this post was submitted on 15 Oct 2024
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I hope you like in depth descriptions of whales
Hmmm, not interested in that. Lol
Is the book fantasy? Like does the whale talk or something? Or is he just talking about going whale hunting(if that's the word).
There's a chapter where Ishmael gets mad that all the whales are named wrong. He spends a while renaming them better.
It's a very odd book. I quite liked it, but it's definitely in the recommend with caution group.
Well, I'm glad I mentioned it here to get some feedback. Phew, it would have been a very long read, especially for me. lol
Don't forget how he asserts that whales are actually fish and he doesn't care what scientists say because he spoke to whalemen
Mammals are supposed to have hair. Don't try to pretend you've seen a whale with a bob or braids. Ishmael was 100% right here.
😆
Most of the book is descriptions of whales, whaling boats, whale skeletons etc. Some of it can be interesting from a historical perspective. I'm sure it was more interesting when people didn't have access to pictures, but it wasn't what I was expecting, that's for sure.
Well, I can't say anything but thank you for saving me a possible week or two of reading something I really have no interest in. I genuinely thought the whale would end up speaking and some fantasy stuff would occur.
Hugo's Hunchback is much the same. There is genuinely a good story, with the gypsy, the priest, Quasimodo himself, and then a good half the center of the book is just a complete history of the Notre Dame cathedral.
I actually have a habit of skipping what I call "stuffing" when I sense it's just stuff I really don't care to know. Saves me some good number of pages. Alexandre Dumas does this a lot in his books. When I read "The count of Monte Cristo", I skipped all the parts where he described landscapes and ocean and all that lovey shit. Lol