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$6.29
101. Seaworthy: A Swordboat Captain
$12.34
102. Four Fish: The Future of the Last

101. Seaworthy: A Swordboat Captain Returns to the Sea
by Linda Greenlaw
Audio CD: 240 Pages (2010-06-01)
list price: US$24.99 -- used & new: US$6.29
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1423390040
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
Linda Greenlaw hadn’t been blue-water fishing for ten years, since the great events chronicled in The Perfect Storm and The Hungry Ocean, when an old friend offered her the captaincy on his boat, Seahawk, for a season of swordfishing. She took the bait, of course, and thus opened a new chapter in a life that had already seen enough adventure for three lifetimes.

The Seahawk turns out to be the rustiest of buckets, with sprung, busted, and ancient equipment guaranteed to fail at any critical moment. Life is never dull out on the Grand Banks, and no one is better at capturing the flavor and details of the wild ride that is swordfishing, from the technical complexities of longline fishing and the nuances of reading the weather and waves to the sheer beauty of the open water. The trip is full of surprises, “a bit hardier and saltier than I had hoped for,” but none more unexpected than when the boat’s lines inadvertently drift across the Canadian border and she lands in jail.

Seaworthy is about nature — human and other; about learning what you can control and what you do when fate takes matters out of your control. It’s about how a middle-aged woman who sets a high bar for herself copes with challenge and change and frustration, about the struggle to succeed or fail on your own terms, and above all, about learning how to find your true self when you’re caught between land and sea. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (14)

1-0 out of 5 stars A Very Bad Book
I thought this an awful book. Billed as an adventure story, there is precious little adventure in it.

After a ten year hiatus from swordfishing, Linda Greenlaw is offered the command of Seahawk, a creaky old vessel with lots of problems. She assembles a crew (who she can't stop gushing over) and spends a week getting Seahawk ready, whereupon she sets sail for the Grand Banks in hopes of catching enough swordfish to make a profit. Along the way, she and her crew encounter a variety of equipment failures and somehow end up fishing illegally in Canadian waters, resulting in Ms. Greenlaw's arrest and brief incarceration. She and her crew finally reach the Grand Banks, fish, catch some, and then return home on the owner's orders to attempt to sell their catch for top dollar. The gambit doesn't work and no one makes any money.

The story certainly isn't as interesting as, say, Moby Dick or 20,000 Leagues under the Sea. But told well, it might have made a solid magazine piece. Instead Ms. Greenlaw and her publisher chose to present it as a 250-page book filled with very little real conflict, but lots of repetition, tortured imagery, technical explanation so convoluted and jargon-filled as to be almost meaningless, purple prose, bad grammar and worst of all, page after page of Ms. Greenlaw's self-congratulation, -explanation, and -aggrandizement. Indeed, Ms. Greenlaw spends far more time describing how she felt about the events that took place than she does describing the events themselves. That's fine if you're sitting around the kitchen table shooting the breeze with an old friend you've known for years. But it hardly belongs in a book being offered to the public as a tale of adventure.

And much of the writing is just plain bad. Lines like:

"I showered in cold water, hoping to clear my mind of the snarl that clogged the routes along which sanity traveled."

or

"Darkness waded in cautiously and headed west. Hesitating waist-deep, then plunging into the murky chill, the diving night splashed light onto the opposite horizon, which swam like spawning salmon up the riverlike sky."

made me want to throw my Kindle across the room (and I really love my Kindle).

In short, I thought Seaworthy not worth its price (even with the Kindle discount) or the time it took to read it. There are many good sea stories out there: e.g., Two Years before the Mast, The Sea Wolf, Moby Dick, The Perfect Storm. Bypass Ms. Greenlaw's latest offering for one of those.



5-0 out of 5 stars Glad the Captain is back on the job
So well written. Can't wait to see how it ends. Thanks for goin' fishin' again, Linda!

5-0 out of 5 stars Down to the sea in ships . . .
Ahh. The lure of the sea. Even if you never really wanted to go to sea for months at a time on a fishing boat, unless you suffer from mal de mer, you'll be caught from the very first sentence of this engrossing and illuminating book by a modern Lorelei. Linda Greenlaw was the first woman captain of a swordfishing boat in the Atlantic Ocean. You may recall her name from //The Perfect Storm//, both book and film. This book is by that same woman, but in a much different adventure aboard the Seahawk.

As she carefully describes the various activities of the four-man crew while steaming towards their target area, she makes it all so clear that you think you could do it all yourself, just by reading. Not so! It's hard work, unpredictable and sometimes heart-breaking, when in spite of doing everything right, the situation suddenly goes terribly wrong.

Her magnificent adversary - the huge swordfish that thrive in the North Atlantic - comes to life in chapter 7 as she delineates her life-long love of and for the creatures. Yet she willingly embarks on yet another attempt to catch them. She doesn't release them either.

A different opponent appears after her boat accidentally drifts out of International waters and into Canadian. Canada is very proprietary about such things, and the intrepid captain is escorted off to jail and a courtroom. After the legal entanglements are solved, it's back to tangled fishing lines and, eventually, a reasonably good catch.

Throughout, Ms. Greenlaw compares her younger, more exuberant self with her more mature and hopefully wiser self. Still - this mature Captain Greenlaw is one with whom I'd gladly sail. I'm not sure I'd have felt the same about the younger one!

Reviewed by Kelly Ferjutz

2-0 out of 5 stars Skip it
Never heard of her before.Saw this book at the library and thought I'd check it out...looked like a fast read.Fast read indeed as I skimmed over most of it.goodness...does she have an ego!I sure hope I don't ever get stuck sitting next to her on a plane.

SO...how much did they all make?There was sooo much chatter in the book about the money, and then she didn't even tell us how much they all made!I know that they made $80,000 gross, but how much were the provisions/fuel, how much did the boat owners, her and her crew make?Seems like her crew did A LOT of work [except for the one guy] especially before they set sail.

2-0 out of 5 stars tedious
Sorry, but I am on page 116 and I am calling it quits.I have loved every one of the author's previous books, but this one is simply boring; and it has perhaps a bit of ego here and there???There are just too many better books waiting to be read! ... Read more


102. Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food
by Paul Greenberg
Audio CD: Pages (2010-07-15)
list price: US$29.99 -- used & new: US$12.34
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1441872426
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
Our relationship with the ocean is undergoing a profound transformation. Just three decades ago nearly everything we ate from the sea was wild. Today rampant overfishing and an unprecedented biotech revolution have brought us to a point where wild and farmed fish occupy equal parts of a complex and confusing marketplace. We stand at the edge of a cataclysm; there is a distinct possibility that our children’s children will never eat a wild fish that has swum freely in the sea.
In Four Fish, award-winning writer and lifelong fisherman Paul Greenberg takes us on a culinary journey, exploring the history of the fish that dominate our menus — salmon, sea bass, cod, and tuna — and investigating where each stands at this critical moment in time. He visits Norwegian megafarms that use genetic techniques once pioneered on sheep to grow millions of pounds of salmon a year. He travels to the ancestral river of the Yupik Eskimos to see the only Fair Trade–certified fishing company in the world. He makes clear how PCBs and mercury find their way into seafood; discovers how Mediterranean sea bass went global; challenges the author of Cod to taste the difference between a farmed and a wild cod; and almost sinks to the bottom ofthe South Pacific while searching for an alternative to endangered bluefin tuna.
Fish, Greenberg reveals, are the last truly wild food — for now. By examining the forces that get fish to our dinner tables, he shows how we can start to heal the oceans and fight for a world where healthy and sustainable seafood is the rule rather than the exception.
Amazon.com Review

Paul Greenberg on Four Fish: Fix the Farm, Not the Salmon

When the New York Times reported in June of 2010 that the US Food and Drug Administration was “seriously considering” approving a genetically modified Atlantic salmon for American consumption the cries from environmentalists and food reformers were, predictably, almost audible on the streets.The AquAdvantage® Salmon uses a “genetic on-switch” from a fish called an ocean pout (a very different animal) in combination with a growth gene from a Chinook salmon to achieve double the growth rate of the unmodified creature.The animal’s creator, AquaBounty Technologies of Waltham, MA asserts that the fish will be sterile and grown in out-of-ocean bio-secure containment structures.Nevertheless the emotional worry of genetic contamination of wild fish, the public preoccupation with health risks a modified salmon could pose, and just the overall ick-factor consumers seem to have about GMO food were all on display across the foodie and environmental blogosphere a few days after the Times article ran.

But, curiously, perhaps the loudest groan that I heard in response to the AquaBounty successes came from salmon farmers.“What I have been noticing over the years,” Thierry Chopin, an aquaculture researcher based in New Brunswick, Canada wrote me, “is that the aquaculture industry is not jumping to embrace what AquaBounty has been proposing.”For years salmon farmers have been waging a public relations war, trying to gain legitimacy as an industry that could be both profitable and produce more food for a hungry world.When a paper published in the journal Nature in 2000 revealed that it took more than three pounds of wild forage fish to grow a single pound of farmed salmon, the salmon industry responded through selective breeding, increased use of soy and other agricultural products and more efficient feeding practices to lower the wild fish use of farmed salmon to the point where some farms claim to have achieved a fish in-fish out ratio of close to 1 pound of wild fish for 1 pound of farmed salmon.When diseases like infectious Salmon Anemia and parasites like sea lice began to run rampant on salmon farms around the world, some regions, like the Bay of Fundy in Canada, instituted better fallowing and crop rotation practices and appear to have had some success in breaking disease and parasite cycles.But in spite of these improvements, a single mention of transgenic salmon in a major media outlet is enough to spoil whatever gains the industry has made in public perception.Indeed, many lay-people I talk with have the impression that transgenic salmon are already a regular part of the farmed salmon market, this despite the fact that there are still no transgenic salmon sold in the United States or anywhere else that I’ve encountered.

Don’t get me wrong.I sincerely do not believe that the salmon industry has solved its environmental problems.But I do think that it suffers an unfair association with the AquaBounty project and that genetic modification distracts from what investment and research really needs to address.The two biggest problems with farming salmon are:

1) Salmon are grown in sea cages, often anchored amidst wild salmon migration routes.This can cause the fouling of waters with wastes and the transmission of diseases and parasites to already seriously threatened and endangered stocks of wild salmon.Selectively bred fish regularly escape and some suggest they may interfere with the lifecycles of wild fish.Even worse, entirely different species of salmon are often raised in non-native environments.Atlantic salmon are regularly farmed in the Pacific and often escape.

2) Farmed salmon consume a huge amount of wild forage fish.Even though feed efficiency on a per fish basis has improved dramatically, salmon farming overall has grown so much that the per-fish efficiency has been all but erased by a much larger overall presence of salmon farming in the world.Atlantic salmon, once limited to the northern latitudes of the northern hemisphere, are now farmed on every single continent save Antarctica.It’s possible farmed salmon escapees may have even reached that most southerly redoubt.Salmon farms exist as far south as Patagonia, South Africa and Tasmania.

So what is the way forward and how do we deal with this transgenic issue?If I were tsar of all salmon farming and could redirect investment money at will, I might take all of those dollars that go into transgenic research and put that money into really confronting the problems that plague the industry.I might look to developing efficient, above ground, re-circulating aquaculture systems.These facilities allow fish to be grown in temperature-controlled environments without any interaction with the wild. Disease transfer and genetic pollution are greatly reduced if not eliminated altogether.Yonathan Zohar a professor and Chair of the Department of Marine Biotechnology at the University of Maryland Baltimore County's has created a test facility right in downtown Baltimore that grows an array of species and even manages to recycle the fish wastes into fuel-grade methane gas that can be used to run pumps or heat water.Though these systems are energy intensive the ability to build them in proximity to markets lessens food miles.Furthermore recirculating systems offer precisely controlled growing conditions and can bring fish to market in half the time as open sea cages.

I might also try to expand on the work of Thierry Chopin who is piloting a program of Integrated Multi-Trophic Aquaculture or IMTA where mussels, edible seaweeds, and sea cucumbers are grown in conjunction with salmon in a complex polyculture.Rather than just trying to make an artificially efficient modified salmon, Chopin is trying to make a more efficient system where multiple crops radiate out from a single feed source.Because mussels, sea cucumbers and sea weed can all metabolize the wastes from salmon, they have a potential to neutralize and reuse the effluent that has plagued salmon farms in the past.

Another place I might put my salmon dollars would be the development of alternative feeds that are synthesized from soy and algae and might eventually obviate the need for using wild forage fish in salmon feed.

Finally, I might consider investing in a different fish altogether.Some critics of the aquaculture industry believe we should do away with the farming of salmonids altogether.But to my eye, there is a very entrenched market for salmon flesh and we might be better served finding a different salmon-like fish that has a smaller footprint. The most hopeful alternative I’ve come across is a fish called the arctic char.The arctic char is from the same taxonomic family as salmon, has pretty good feed conversion ratios, rich flesh, and most interestingly of all, because it frequently finds itself crammed into close quarters when its natural arctic lakes freeze, it has high disease resistance and takes extremely well to high stocking densities—densities that are necessary to make out-of-ocean aquaculture operations profitable.And this is exactly what’s happening with char.Most are grown in re-circulating, above ground tanks in Iceland and Canada.

Of course some people will never embrace a farmed solution for fish.There is a camp that feels very strongly that farmed fish are uniformly bad for the world and inferior on the plate.I have to confess that I don’t always share this opinion.Arctic char strike me as a good environmental compromise and to my palate, they’re pretty tasty.

--Paul Greenberg

... Read more

Customer Reviews (32)

5-0 out of 5 stars Brain Food
So the choices seem to be never eat fish again --because all the wild stocks of salmon, tuna, bass, cod are collapsing or have already collapsed due to impossible fishing pressures-- or focus on farming and eating genetically-modified fish, to the detriment of wild stocks due to possible genetic mixing. Not much of a choice. An important and fascinating book so you can make your own choices about eating fish with clear and informed intent.

4-0 out of 5 stars Not a fish-eye view
This is a serious book about a serious subject, or rather, a small aspect of a serious subject - what are we doing to sea life? Greenberg writes with beautiful ease and "Four Fish" is a delight to read. It is full of information about the four fish, especially their characteristics in the wild and how they are being farmed and the effect of that farming on man's taste for fish. It is a book that sets the mind thinking; deeply and anxiously. So by those counts this should be a four or five star book. I deliberated long on this and almost gave it three stars for the content and the prose. The missing star was intended for the great distraction this book might be to many of its readers. Ultimately, Greenberg has a message for his readers, but that message is at once obscured and blurred by his focus on four fish when the focus must be on the entire sea-life. This is not a personal fault of the book or the author and I am making this point to draw attention to the bigger picture and the bigger problem. We need to know about the squids, and the anchovies, and the threadfins, and the soles; and how can we go on if the population of the world is not reduced? Since it was this book that led me to think of these things, I think the fourth star should be given - one for each fish.

4-0 out of 5 stars A must read for fish eaters
Well written and an entertaining read.Greenberg makes learning about these 4 species and their associated issues easy and worthwhile.Without standing on a soapbox, he depicts each species' troubles and then provides information consumers can use in order to eat fish more sustainably.

4-0 out of 5 stars Great Fish Stories, Could Have Used a More Careful Filleting
This book covers a tasty topic and is easy to wade into. Although it doesn't go into the depths, it's clear the writer has seen a lot along the coastal waters where he is comfortable. The accounts he gives of his own experiences as an ocean predator are interspersed neatly into his narratives about the fates of each of his four classes of fish. But the book could have been even better with some further sentence-by-sentence editing to eliminate repetitions, and deeper explanations of the science involved in resurrecting extirpated populations.

Still, this is worth the bite.

3-0 out of 5 stars Choices
Paul Greenberg presents both problems and alternative solutions in his new book, Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food. Greenberg presents the history and current situation with four fish: salmon, cod, tuna and bass. He explores sustainability and the issue of wild and farmed fish. He presents what he calls four clearly achievable goals for wild fish: a reduction in fishing effort; no-catch areas of the ocean; protect unmanageable species, and protect the bottom of the food chain. This is a readable and informative presentation of an interesting issue. Any reader who's interested in fish, science or more knowledge about what we eat, will likely enjoy this book.

Rating: Three-star (Recommended)
... Read more


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