Tides: The Science and Spirit of the Ocean
Tides: The Science and Spirit of the Ocean book cover

Tides: The Science and Spirit of the Ocean

Hardcover – January 31, 2017

Price
$13.93
Format
Hardcover
Pages
360
Publisher
Trinity University Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1595348050
Dimensions
6.25 x 1.25 x 9.25 inches
Weight
1.5 pounds

Description

"A phenomenal book -- probably one of the smartest books about a spirit I've ever read." ― The Toronto Star "A rich story... engaging." ― The Wall Street Journal "A lively exploration of the heritage, culture, practices and politics that shape Mexico's most famous export. Martineau introduces producers using traditional agricultural and distillation methods, shows readers why they're worth preserving, and outlines the challenges facing anyone concerned with the quality and sustainability of tequila, mezcal and other agave spirits." ― The Kansas City Star "Martineau journeys through Mexico interviewing producers of the agave-based spirits tequila and mescal. She's dismayed that international beverage distributors now design and market Mexico's signature alcoholic drinks and that techniques of mass production too often sacrifice integrity and authenticity." ― Foreign Affairs "Martineau argues convincingly that good tequila resembles wine more than it does its fellow liquors. She writes of agave plantations as if they are vineyards, with variations in climate, slope, soil, and moisture resulting in variations in the plants that are, in turn, discernible in the distilled product. She co-opts the precious French word terroir and applies it to her subject with no intended loss of dignity." ― The Los Angeles Review of Books “Conservationist Jonathan White combines scientific investigation with personal memoir in this solid examination of the nature of tides and waves.”― Publishers Weekly “Anyone inclined to take the movement of the tides for granted will think twice after reading this wide-ranging study from a conservationist and avid sailor... White’s heightened awareness of the planet’s “cosmic beat” is bound to make readers more sensitive to the mysteries of what might otherwise seem commonplace.”― Kirkus Review “[Jonathan White's] writing can be gorgeous.... prose that's as beguiling as it is informative.”― The Oregonian “Tides is a circumnavigation – tides are simultaneously the protagonist and antagonist. Wrecker of havoc and deus exmachina. And perhaps what’s most interesting is White’s narrative surrounding how each part of the world has adapted to their unique tidal variations. Tides aspires to inspire a new appreciation for a global natural process that most ocean enthusiasts take for granted.”― The Internia “A wonderful bit of writing… wonderfully descriptive… a travelogue and an adventure story.”― Helen Palmer , host of Living on Earth “Jonathan White is not only an accomplished storyteller, but a rare exemplar of the marriage of technical lucidity with stylistic grace.”― Alan Littell , Ocean Navigator “A grand mix of science history, ocean lore and literary travel writing.”― Seattle Times “Fascinating account.”― Epoch Times “A fascinating work of literary nonfiction, rich with characters, stories and scenes from around the globe. White considers the book to be 'a life’s work,' one that took him more than 10 years to complete. He doesn’t simply examine the mysteries of the tides, he brings readers on his adventure ― one filled with wonder and surprises and fed by White’s relentless curiosity.”― Bangor Daily News “As a surfer and sailor, Jonathan White pays attention to tides. But he didn’t really understand them until he traveled around the world to meet people and see places where the ebb and flow, the rise and fall, shape lives and tell epic stories. His new nonfiction book, Tides , is the result.”― San Diego Union-Tribune “[Jonathan]…you write like an angel….Lovely, lyrical writing.”― Michael Krasny , host of The Forum on KQED “The sailor-surfer-conservationist takes us on a global travelogue-scientific expedition.”― Sacramento Bee “A fascinating read.”― Portland Press Herald “A captivating examination of all things tidal.” ― Anchorage Daily News "Jonathan White's tidal explorations drew me in with just the right mix of science, history, and storytelling, propelled throughout by the author's infectious curiosity and sense of wonder. Beautifully written, impeccably researched, and filled with unexpected connections and discoveries, Tides is a splendid book;highly recommended." ― Thor Hanson, author of Feathers and The Triumph of Seeds "I loved this book. Jonathan White weaves the science throughout his travel stories so that the reader is not inundated with mathematical and scientific theories. I recommend it to both scientists and nonscientists." ― Sally Warner, PhD in physical oceanography, Oregon State University "One of the most fascinating, engaging, relevant, and impeccably brilliant books I have ever read. It has profoundly changed my sense of the earth, the oceans, the sky, and how they are deeply interwoven with the course of human thought and history." ― Richard Nelson, author of The Island Within "Newton's death mask, bore tide waves on a Chinese river, a grounded sailboat in Alaska, a French monastery, the slowing of the earth's rotation, world-class surfing, alternative energy, and more come together in Jonathan White's wonderful Tides , a book for every lover of the sea and for those who think― mistakenly― that tables and charts contain everything worth knowing about the perpetual rise and fall of the sea."― Bill Streever, author of And Soon I Heard a Roaring Wind: A Natural History of Moving Air "Tides is easy to read, easy to follow, erudite. White beautifully integrates his personal experience into the science, keeping me grounded in the present as a reader and making the tides not just personal but passionately alive. I expect to read it again and again. Pass it on, recommend it, give it as a gift!" ― Pam Loew, Turtleback Books "Jonathan White provides us in this fine, fascinating book with a clear understanding of the infinitely complex and wild nature of our planet's tidal forces in all their mystery and beauty." ― Peter Matthiessen, from the foreword Jonathan White is an active marine conservationist, a sailor, and a surfer. His first book, Talking on the Water: Conversations about Nature and Creativity , is a collection of interviews exploring our relationship with nature and features Gretel Ehrlich, David Brower, Ursula K. Le Guin, Gary Snyder, Peter Matthiessen, and others. White has written for the Christian Science Monitor, The Sun, Orion, Surfer’s Journal , and other publications. He holds an MFA in creative nonfiction and lives with his wife and son on a small island in Washington State. Peter Matthiessen (May 22, 1927–April 5, 2014) was an American novelist, naturalist, wilderness writer, and CIA agent. A co-founder of the Paris Review , he was a 2008 National Book Award winner. He was also an environmental activist. His nonfiction, notably The Snow Leopard , featured nature and travel, as well as American Indian issues and history, including his study of the Leonard Peltier case, In the Spirit of Crazy Horse . His early story story "Travelin' Man" was made into the film The Young One directed by Luis Buñuel, and his novel At Play in the Fields of the Lord was made into a 1991 film. He lived in Sagaponak, New York. Peter Matthiessen (1927–2014) was an American novelist, naturalist, wilderness writer, and CIA agent. A co-founder of The Paris Review , he was a 2008 National Book Award winner. He was also a prominent environmental activist. His nonfiction featured nature and travel, including The Snow Leopard , and American Indian issues and history, such as a controversial study of the Leonard Peltier case, In the Spirit of Crazy Horse . His early story “Travelin’ Man” was made into the 1960 film The Young One , directed by Luis Buñuel, and his novel At Play in the Fields of the Lord (1965) into a 1991 film. He lived in Sagaponak, New York.

Features & Highlights

  • In
  • Tides: The Science and Spirit of the Ocean
  • , writer, sailor, and surfer Jonathan White takes readers across the globe to discover the science and spirit of ocean tides. In the Arctic, White shimmies under the ice with an Inuit elder to hunt for mussels in the dark cavities left behind at low tide; in China, he races the Silver Dragon, a twenty-five-foot tidal bore that crashes eighty miles up the Qiantang River; in France, he interviews the monks that live in the tide-wrapped monastery of Mont Saint-Michel; in Chile and Scotland, he investigates the growth of tidal power generation; and in Panama and Venice, he delves into how the threat of sea level rise is changing human culture—the very old and very new.
  • Tides
  • combines lyrical prose, colorful adventure travel, and provocative scientific inquiry into the elemental, mysterious paradox that keeps our planet’s waters in constant motion. Photographs, scientific figures, line drawings, and sixteen color photos dramatically illustrate this engaging, expert tour of the tides.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(234)
★★★★
25%
(98)
★★★
15%
(59)
★★
7%
(27)
-7%
(-28)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A glory of a book

This book is a treasure that can’t quite be categorized. In plain language and clear drawings, it teaches quite a lot about the tides, how they work, and why they are so much stronger and weaker at different times and at different places. Yet the book is so much more: a travel memoir of adventures to faraway places (the coast of Normandy, a river in China, an Inuit village near the Arctic Circle, to name a few) and cultural history that deepens our understanding of the scientific discoveries and, for this non-scientist reader, makes the science accessible and a pleasure to learn. And finally, the book opens into questions of energy consumption and climate change, leaving the reader pondering our human capacity to solve problems, perhaps in part through the energy of the tides.

Jonathan White has clearly gone where few of us would dare: over a river wall to await the arrival of a 25-foot wave, where he will have 10 seconds’ notice to make a climb back out that requires 7 seconds; under a thick ceiling of ice in the Arctic to gather mussels with an Inuit hunter at low tide; venturing along on a small skiff into churning waters in the Pacific Northwest. The tales he tells are gripping, wonderful to read aloud to family members. Yet the voice in which he writes is not so much that of a bold adventurer but of a humble and curious seeker. His reverence for the natural world and his wonder at the role of the tides within it will vibrate with the reader after the last paragraph has been read.
24 people found this helpful
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TIDES is a wonderfully-engaging, entertaining, and informative book ...

TIDES is a wonderfully-engaging, entertaining, and informative book. I had been under the impression that I understood the basic nature and cause of oceanic tides, but White’s book provides a whole new level of understanding, appreciation of and deference for the role of the dynamic waters of the ocean. White describes how the movement of the planet’s oceans are extraordinarily complex, inexorable, almost mystifying and idiosyncratic to the local geography and topography. The reader of TIDES not only comes away with a rich understanding and…especially…a deep respect for the power of oceanic tides, but given White’s many engaging stories about his personal adventures while exploring the extremes of tides’ unbelievable antics around the globe, comes away with a sense that either (s)he’s been there, or…in my case…wants to go there to share in the discovery of the majesty and power of tides.
17 people found this helpful
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Tides is a fun collection of anecdotes that makes for an enjoyable read

Tides is a fun collection of anecdotes that makes for an enjoyable read. Some asides (such as seeing St Mark's from the Lido, and speculation as to why Monday starts the week) are superfluous and sadly incorrect, but the preponderance of the anecdotes are enjoyable and informative. Tides is at its best when White sticks to his accounts and their immediate ramifications. With some more careful editing and fact-checking, this could have easily been a four, or even five, star review.
8 people found this helpful
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Unbelievably fabulous read! Couldn't put it down.

Absolutely incredible Book! First quarter was a little like reading a text book. The balance was like reading a action novel. I have been on the water (Long Island, New England, Bahamas, Leeward and Windward Islands) sailing for fifty plus years. Was only aware of different tidal ranges in those various areas. Sailing makes you aware of tidal currents; go with the flow and go a little faster, go against the flow and go very slow. This book tells the story of what has to be one of the most powerful, if not the most powerful, force in nature; gravity. Mind boggling!
8 people found this helpful
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Perfect combo of Science & the Spirit!

I love this book! It's a wonderful combo of science, poetry, life experience and spiritualism wrapped up in pages in the form of a rectangle / book. I ocean kayak alot in the summer in Maine, and this book will be my go-to when I have a question about the tides AND the moon. I heard the author interviewed in Aug 2017, and bought the book, you will love it!
6 people found this helpful
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Stories, science and indigenous ways of knowing the ocean and moon cycles in this page-turner

This book was hard to put down! Not only did I learn about tides, I learned so much about moon cycles (I didn't know that every full moon rises around the time the sun sets even though I've observed it many times) and mind-blowing stuff like how the friction of the waves against the shore slow down the earth's rotation and push away the moon. All told in an engaging way. Great stories of intimately knowing the ocean in an observational, first-hand way by those whose survival depends on it, and then all the science of it. He even touched on the interaction of science and mystical knowledge as the scientists were discovering that formless force called gravity. It covered everything I wanted to know about the tides and much more, and I was a biology major. I bought this book to do an independent study tide project with my kids on a trip and it gave me so many great ideas of observational projects to do. Surpassed my expectations by far. One warning, if you get excited about it like I did, you might annoy your kids by telling them interesting facts about the tides and the moon every night at dinner while you are reading it. I just couldn't help myself, it was that fascinating.
6 people found this helpful
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"At every rising and every setting...the sea violently covers the coast far and wide...and once this same surge has been...

...drawn back it lays the beaches bare...as though it is unwittingly drawn up by some breathings of the Moon."

When I read a non-fiction book about something that interests me, I jot down a page or two of notes to help me remember valuable information. While reading this book, I filled 12 pages! Author Jonathan White, who explains in the introduction, “My interest in tides springs from a fascination with the ocean,” follows a common non-fiction book writing recipe: choose topic; subtopics; include pre-subtopic quote; write half a dozen to a dozen chapters (in White’s case—9), each about a different aspect of the topic that is a stand-alone-able; research and travel as needed to learn about the subtopics; compile the entire experience, weaving in interesting information and just enough technical stuff. I’ve read some that weren’t executed well (for example, Salt by Chris Mauldin which I found too detailed) and others that were (I loved Susan Casey’s Voices in the Ocean). Jonathan White’s compilation, five years in the making, belongs in the excellent execution category. He draws you in with the perilous personal story that made him pay proper attention to tides, then keeps you there from the first to the final page.

He does this, in part, by choosing topics that sense. When I think of tides, I wonder about the history of tidal theory and changes in sea levels over time. White includes three chapters related to these subjects: Ch 2 The Star of Our Life: A Meditation on Tide History at Mont Saint-Michel (p 55), “The tide is another kind of eloquence. It’s the moon’s voice on earth, spoken with perfect synchronicity;” Ch 4 The Last Magician: Sir Isaac Newton and the Scientific Revolution (p 98), “Nullius in verba. The Latin meaning, “take nobody’s word for it,” is often distilled to, “question everything.” [words I live by]; and Ch 9 Higher Tides: Sea Level Rise From Kuna Yala to Venice. Another wonder: extreme and/or unusual tides (and/or waves). The author writes about sandpipers and the mud shrimp they need to survive in one of my favorite chapters, Ch 1 The Perfect Dance: Birds and Big Tides in the Bay of Fundy, (p 22), “Did the mudshrimps and birds of Fundy call to each other?;” Ch 3 Silver Dragon: China’s Qiatang River Tidal Bore (never even heard of a bore before); Ch 5 Big Waves: Surfing Mavericks and Nineteenth-Century Tide Theories (p 154), “[amphidromes’…circling arms are indeed waves traveling at 450 miles per hour;” and Ch 7 Big Tides and Resonance: Fundy and Ungava (p 209), “Of the four hundred tide-generating constituents, only 12 are responsible for 90% of the tide, 90% of the time…”

Because I live in the PNW (like the author, “on a small island in Washington State,” his is Orcas, mine Fidalgo), where hydraulic power is pretty common, I think about the potential for harnessing tidal energy, White writes about it in Ch 8 Turning the Tide: Grinding Wheat, Powering Homes (p 234), “The energy we use is killing the world.” But as someone who’s learned most of what I know about tides from TidesForFishing.com (not kidding), I’m most interested in the factors, above and beyond syzygy (the coolest word ever) that affect tides. Using text, photos and sketches, White handles the potentially confusing facts about “tide-generating constituents,” by serving them in small portions, in general. I found the concepts the author includes in Chapter 6 Fast Water: How Tidal Currents Slow the Earth and Bend Time absolutely fascinating. The information goes beyond any ideas I’d previously had about tides’ contributing to things that happen on and off of our planet.

In summary, Tides “a travel adventure, personal journey, cultural history, and provocative scientific inquiry into the forces that keep the earth’s waters in constant motion,” is as great book for those people, like me, who are part of the (p 17), “More than half of the world’s population [that] lives on or near the coast” as for those who don’t. Also excellent: The Good Rain by Timothy Egan, Voices in the Ocean by Susan Casey and Mountains Beyond Mountains by Tracy Kidder.
6 people found this helpful
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Elegant prose but short on science; at least as far as I got ...

Started reading this and could not stay awake. Was looking for more science and less poetic prose (actually, none). Don't know if I'll ever pick it up again and attempt to read any further. Seems excellent if you have problems with insomnia.
4 people found this helpful
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Great book!

I live by the ocean and have to keep track of the tides. I understood the basics of tides. This book gives the details and so much more. I love the science history the author includes. It is interesting to see how our understanding of tides has evolved over the centuries.
4 people found this helpful
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Jonathan White's Tides is one of the best nonfiction books I've read in a long time because ...

Jonathan White's Tides is one of the best nonfiction books I've read in a long time because there are so many levels on which to love it. First, the writing is absolutely gorgeous, the passages crafted with lush imagery and phrasing by a masterful writer and poet. Second, learning about ocean tides, which I knew nothing about before this book, was an education and adventure I never imagined would be so engaging. I have a newfound appreciation, not only for the ocean but the planet itself. Moreover, Jonathan writes about tides in a way that a layperson like me can understand but with the expertise I imagine someone more learned on the subject will appreciate, too. And lastly, there's Jonathan and the stories he shares with readers. He has made a unique journey of his life and is generous enough to bring us into corners of the Earth we might not see otherwise. This book made me want to travel, to sit by the ocean and to read more of this great author's work. I can't recommend it highly enough.
4 people found this helpful