PD Smith

Leviathan or, The Whale

08 July 2009 | Reviewing, TLS | Post a comment

The Times Lit­er­ary Sup­ple­ment has just pub­lished my review of Philip Hoare’s Leviathan or, The Whale, the deserv­ing win­ner of this year’s Samuel John­son prize.

“Per­haps it is because I was near­ly born under­wa­ter.” The first sen­tence of Philip Hoare’s mem­o­rable study of whales points teas­ing­ly to an ear­ly affin­i­ty between author and sub­ject. His moth­er began to feel labour pains while on a tour of a sub­ma­rine in Portsmouth har­bour. As a boy he lay awake at night lis­ten­ing to the “clank­ing dredgers” goug­ing a chan­nel through Southamp­ton Water for the lin­ers and con­tain­er ships.

But although the sea was a for­ma­tive influ­ence it was also a source of anx­i­ety: “I have always been afraid of deep water.” School trips to Southampton’s munic­i­pal swim­ming pool did noth­ing to cure his fear. He only learnt to swim as an adult. But now he admits to feel­ing claus­tro­pho­bic if he is far from the sea and, like Ish­mael in Her­man Melville’s epic nov­el Moby-Dick (1851), Hoare is “haunt­ed” by the whale.

Read my review here and lis­ten to Claire Armit­stead­’s inter­view with the author at the Guardian.

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