cover image Final Voyage: A Story of Arctic Disaster and One Fateful Whaling Season

Final Voyage: A Story of Arctic Disaster and One Fateful Whaling Season

Peter Nichols. Putnam Adult, $26.95 (294pp) ISBN 978-0-399-15602-1

Chronicling the downfall of the vast whaling industry developed in New England over the 18th and 19th centuries, author Nichols (A Voyage for Madmen) presents both an illuminating portrait of Quaker life and industry, and a heart-pounding tale of danger on the open sea. Nichols has a rich understanding of the whale oil (""oyl"") industry, and recreates the atmosphere of whaling voyages and villages, particularly wealthy New Bedford, Mass., in sensuous detail: ""Emissions of greasy particulate settled over the town like a glaze and gave it the permanent odor of burnt flesh and fat."" A collection of ships' logbooks and letters from whaling captains give character to the phenomenal victories and challenges the seamen-and their family-faced. There is a lot to admire in the whalers; their captains ""were master mariners and navigators, among the canniest and most skillful in human history,"" and their task enormous. Although death and loss were common in the hunt, the 1871 season recounted here marked the beginning of the end for the oyl industry, a major disaster in which an entire fleet was caught in a diabolical arctic weather system.