"Propulsive and vivid history" —The New York Times Book Review
“Gripping . . . It isn’t possible in this short space to describe Side’s hair-raising accounts of the journey . . . Sides recreates the newness of the experience, the vast differences in and among Indigenous cultures, and natural phenomena that were as terrifying as they were wondrous."
—The Washington Post
"[T]hrilling and superbly-crafted" —Wall Street Journal
"Riveting" —AP
"Hampton Sides, an acclaimed master of the nonfiction narrative, has taken on Cook’s story and retells it for the 21st century . . . The result is a work that will enthrall Cook’s admirers, inform his critics and entertain everyone in between." —Los Angeles Times
“The great explorer’s ill-starred last mission and violent death in Hawaii are recreated in swashbuckling detail…an astounding tale and Sides delivers the exciting episodes with a pressing narrative urgency. The cast of characters is a joy." –The Sunday Times (London)
"Hampton Sides’s riveting, rollicking new book The Wide Wide Sea investigates the great navigator’s last, doomed journey" —The Telegraph (UK)
"With gripping prose, Sides details Cook's increasingly erratic behavior as he explored vast swaths of the Pacific and scrambled to find the fabled Northwest Passage along the ice-choked coast of Alaska. His account lays bare the Age of Exploration's moral perils, which continue to reverberate today." —Outside Magazine
“Sides has written a riveting book, deeply researched, light of touch and always judicious and full-sailed about an exceptional man’s final extraordinary journey.” —The Spectator
"The Wide Wide Sea portrays Cook as a complicated figure driven by instincts and motives that often seem to have been opaque even to him . . . [A]s Cook himself seemed to have realized, and at times lamented, he was but an instrument in a much, much larger scheme."
—The New Yorker
“An acclaimed historian takes to the sea in this rousing tale of exploration . . . Sides draws on numerous contemporaneous sources to create a fascinating, immersive adventure story featuring just the right amount of historical context . . . Lusciously detailed and insightful history, masterfully told.” —Kirkus Reviews, (starred)
“This exquisitely crafted and novelistic portrait of the mercurial captain enthralls.”
—Publishers Weekly, (starred)
"Beautifully written and impeccably researched, The Wide Wide Sea will delight readers new to the topic as well as those versed in earlier looks at James Cook and his milieu.”
—Booklist
"[O]ne of the premier historians of our day . . . Sides brings to life all the excitement, drudgery, politics, and intercultural complications of the first interactions between the peoples of the Pacific and Europeans . . . As a guide through such murky cultural waters, Sides is unsurpassed."
—Chapter 16
“The Wide Wide Sea transports the reader to one of the most thrilling eras of human exploration. With deft use of the words of Cook’s own men and the oral traditions of the Indigenous people whose lands they visited, Hampton Sides has conjured Cook’s fatal voyage in all its extraordinary and tragic magnificence.”
—Caroline Alexander, New York Times bestselling author of The Endurance and The Bounty
“In all the annals of exploration, Cook’s last journey around the world stands out for its fascination, tragedy, and sheer epic scope. Hampton Sides does justice to this extraordinary history, vividly capturing its splendor, violence, and madness. Here are stories within stories, deeply researched and woven into a tapestry that brings to life Captain Cook, his times, and the oceans he explored. More than that, it portrays in a nuanced and respectful way those peoples impacted by his final voyage—including the Aboriginal Tasmanians, the Māori, the Tahitians, the Hawaiians, and Native Alaskans. I highly recommend this fantastic book.”
—Douglas Preston, #1 bestselling author of The Lost City of the Monkey God and Cities of Gold
"Hampton Sides has a gift for taking stories you thought you knew and making them feel fresh and revelatory. Along the way, he has also mastered the art of you-are-there historical narrative. In The Wide Wide Sea, this combination is irresistible: fascinating and horrifying by turns, Sides puts us on deck with Captain Cook, one of the world’s greatest and most disciplined explorers, as he comes undone in real time, in ways that make comparisons to our current planetary moment inescapable. This is a thrilling and necessary update to one of history’s most consequential cultural collisions."
—John Vaillant, New York Times bestselling author of Fire Weather and The Tiger
“So much is made of Western ‘civilized' explorers heading out on grand adventures, but seldom is anything said of Indigenous people on their own journeys of exploration into the heart of whiteness. In The Wide Wide Sea, Hampton Sides does just that. Alongside the narrative of Cook’s voyage, Sides tells the gripping story of a young Pacific Islander named Mai, plucked from his home in Tahiti in the late 18th century and brought to England as a curiosity only to return to the South Pacific four years later. With quietly forceful and meticulous research, Sides gives us a tale that is fascinating, important, and inexplicably sad.”
—David Treuer, New York Times bestselling author of The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee and Rez Life
“An instant classic. . . this majestic account reminds us just how deep runs our desire to know the shape and limits of our world. Dispatched from England to seek the Northwest Passage, Captain Cook braved violent storms and unknown shores while coping with his own growing demons. Drawing on a wealth of detail from the crew’s diarists and judiciously applying modern interpretation, Sides brings Cook’s glorious and tragic final act to shimmering life.”
—Dean King, New York Times bestselling author of A Sea of Words, Skeletons on the Zahara, and Patrick O’Brian: A Life Revealed
“Here is an adventure so strange and epic it rivals the greatest tales of myth. The cast of characters includes a restless Captain Cook, an anxious King George III on the verge of losing his American colonies, a London high society newly infatuated with the romance of the “noble savage,” and a good-natured young Polynesian man heartily bent on an inter-island massacre. Sides turns this riveting narrative into a cautionary tale about the heedless cruelty of colonialism and the collateral damage that can result from even the best-intentioned first contact.”
—Peter Heller, New York Times bestselling author of The Dog Stars, The River, and The Guide
“James Cook was the paragon of eighteenth-century navigators and the master of Pacific exploration. With The Wide Wide Sea, Hampton Sides has crafted an enthralling new account of Cook’s last voyage and death, based upon careful research that sensitively balances European attitudes and Indigenous reactions.” —John B. Hattendorf, professor emeritus of the U.S. Naval War College and editor-in-chief of the Oxford Encyclopedia of Maritime History
“There is no finer writer than Hampton Sides to pilot a narrative so densely packed with adventure, drama, and moral complexity. The Wide Wide Sea braids the sweeping flair of a Patrick O’Brian novel with Nathaniel Philbrick’s boundless love for the world’s wild oceans. Here is a saga as tautly tuned as an eighteenth-century sailing ship, told by a master storyteller at the height of his powers.”
—Kevin Fedarko, New York Times bestselling author of The Emerald Mile
“A rare gift: One of the world’s greatest storytellers tells one of the world’s greatest stories, in this thrilling, clear-eyed account."
—Julian Sancton, New York Times bestselling author of Madhouse at the End of the Earth
“Hampton Sides has embarked on a voyage to understand what drove this extraordinary but controversial explorer. Skillfully navigating the shoals of myth, he transports readers back in time to give us a presence at Cook’s historic encounters with the peoples of the Pacific and Northwest America.”
—Cliff Thornton, former president of the international Captain Cook Society
Of the several audiobooks about British sea explorer James Cook, this is one of the most memorable. Peter Noble is a powerful narrator, and he weds himself to this action-packed story with deep empathy and understanding. As the Revolutionary War unfolded on the east side of the North American continent, Cook explored the west, searching in vain for a Northwest Passage. Along the way, he explored much of the west Pacific, stumbling upon Hawaii, where his crews introduced metalworking and venereal disease, and soon roused open hostilities. Cook is a complex, contradictory protagonist, and Sides brings an effective degree of balance and insight to a revisionist portrait that finds many fissures in the great explorer's heroic facade. D.A.W. © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine
★ 2024-01-05
An acclaimed historian takes to the sea in this rousing tale of exploration.
Sides, author of Hellhound on His Trail and Ghost Soldiers, writes that James Cook’s (1728-1779) voyages “form a morally complicated tale that has left a lot for modern sensibilities to unravel and critique.” The author seeks to “describe what happened during his consequential, ambitious, and ultimately tragic final voyage,” with 180 people on two ships—the Discovery and the Resolution, captained by William Bligh—that embarked in July 1776. Along with a wide range of animals, leaving with Cook was Mai, a Tahitian whose “life story offered a poignant allegory of first contact between England and the people of Oceania.” The plan was to sail around the Cape of Good Hope, drop Mai off on an island, claim any new territories, and search for the Northwest Passage. Fortunately, Capt. Charles Clerke, released from debtor’s prison, joined the Discovery in Plymouth. Crew members were noticing changes in Cook’s demeanor. They reached Cape Town in October, rested, and repaired and restocked. After Clerke arrived, they set off in November. In late January, they reached Tasmania and then New Zealand. In August, they arrived at Tahiti, the “place of their wildest desires,” and removed most of the animals the king gave them. When a Native islander stole a goat, Cook began destroying canoes and setting fires on Moorea, “punishing the many for the misdeeds of an individual.” In December, Cook headed north, eventually reaching America’s western coast, Alaska, Asia, and the icy Arctic Circle, making contact with many Natives. His voyage ended in Hawaii when he was killed by angry Natives in a grisly fight. Sides draws on numerous contemporaneous sources to create a fascinating, immersive adventure story featuring just the right amount of historical context.
Lusciously detailed and insightful history, masterfully told.