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The Fragile Edge: Diving and Other Adventures in the South Pacific
 
 
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The Fragile Edge: Diving and Other Adventures in the South Pacific (Hardcover)

by Julia Whitty (Author)
Key Phrases: lhun drub, fragile edge, topside world, French Polynesia, South Pacific, Tiputa Pass (more...)
5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Review
'The Fragile Edge' is at once a natural history, a call to action, a love song, and a prayer.
O, The Oprah Magazine

For those of us who can't visit the South Pacific … writer and producer Whitty gives us the next best thing.
Library Journal

This is a moving and illuminating love story about one woman and the fathomless deep.
Elle

"This important book makes clear the absolute urgency of saving the coral reefs of the world." – actor/activist Ted Danson

“Whitty is emerging as one of the must-read voices about the wet three-quarters of the planet." -- Bill McKibben

"Whitty's prose is supple and scientifically informed (a rare and graceful mix) ... her intimacies with the ocean's curiosities captivate." The New York Times

"Extraordinarily absorbing." - Santa Rosa Press Democrat


Product Description
A master diver and filmmaker on the mystery, fragility—and heart-stopping adventure—of underwater life in the South Pacific

Julia Whitty paints a mesmerizing, scientifically rich portrait of teeming coral reefs in the Tuamotu Archipelago, the Society Islands, and off the tiny nation of Tuvalu. The Fragile Edge takes us literally beneath the surface of the usual travel narrative -- to the underwater equivalent of an African big-game safari, where hammerhead sharks rule a cascading chain of extraordinary underwater from eagle rays to reef sharks, while the sounds of courting humpback whales reverberate throughout the deep.

Equally inspiring for armchair or expert divers, The Fragile Edge illuminates Eastern-influenced diving techniques that transform our understanding of diving from sport to breath-inspired art. Whitty reports on the latest ways in which science extends our understanding of unfathomable waters, opening our eyes to the threats facing coral reefs and to why these fragile oases are vital to human survival.

On the island of Mo‘orea in the South Pacific, she witnesses a group of spinner dolphins caught inside the sieve between barrier reef and coral atoll. In this and scores of other intensely memorable scenes, Whitty emerges as one of our finest writers on the mystery, beauty, and fragility of the underwater ocean world.


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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (May 7, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0618197168
  • ISBN-13: 978-0618197163
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.8 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #612,074 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #13 in  Books > Outdoors & Nature > Ecosystems > Coral Reefs
    #17 in  Books > Science > Biological Sciences > Ecology > Marine
    #73 in  Books > Science > Nature & Ecology > Oceans & Seas > Coral Reefs


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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, May 22, 2007
By Aquadiver (Columbia, MD USA) - See all my reviews
Most people think of coral reefs as part of the tropical paradise they seek when they jet off to "the islands" to get away from the cold of winter. Reefs are associated with palm trees and blue water and sun tans and romance. Biologists and oceanographers know that reefs are the most diverse communities on the planet, built into enormous structures by some of the smallest and most interesting animals on the planet. In many ways, coral reefs are the basis of life in the ocean.

But in the South Pacific, reefs and the islands they surround and support are in deep trouble (no pun intended). Julia Whitty has been filming reefs for 15 years, so she knows them well, and she has seen their deterioration first hand. Now she has turned her considerable talents to writing a book, and if there's any justice, this book will do for coral what Rachel Carson's books did for the oceans and shores nearly half a century ago.

"The Fragile Edge: Diving and Other Adventures in the South Pacific" is a three-part work that unflinchingly examines the world of coral reefs from three perspectives, each set on a different island in French Polynesia. In part one, she describes the atoll of Rangiroa from the perspective of a diver. Writing about the underwater world is no easy task.

Photographers and film-makers have always done a better job of describing the life aquatic. Perhaps that is because it is such a visual experience that most divers perceive it only from the right side of the brain, so it's easier to capture and present great images in lieu of thousands of words. Whitty has managed to capture the experience with words as powerful and colorful and well-composed as any photo or video clip she has ever made.

But her descriptions are not just artful. They are well grounded in science. She knows the biology of the reef and the intricate web of relationships in the coral ecosystem. The reader can learn with a sense of awe.

Part 2, Whitty moves to the dying atoll of Funafuti. This is no paradise. She takes a room in a guesthouse owned by a terminally alcoholic German expat and his wife Emily, a nurse who works for the atoll's local government. Funafuti is devoid of tourists and is rapidly losing its only source of economic support -- the reef around it -- to overfishing and pollution. Western influence has turned the formerly self-sufficient island into a throwaway society that is in deep denial about the threats surrounding it from all sides, especially the rising of the sea as far away glaciers in Antarctica and Greenland turn liquid. Even in that, Funafuti is a victim of Western influence as the locals choose to believe Australian denials that the sea level is rising, in spite of the evidence in front of them.

In the final part, Whitty visits Mo'orea, where she introduces the reader to the inhabitants of the island's lagoon and reef in lyrical but unsentimental prose. From her encounter with a pelagic octopus to the tense, inevitable demise of a pod of spinner dolphins when inconvenient winds trap them inside the reef, where they normally rest, but have no food, Whitty shares her sharp observations and insights, flavored with references to Hindu mythology (she hints at having a South Asian heritage) to try to explain states of mind that humans and some animals might actually have in common.

Whitty concludes this astonishing work with an epilogue set on Marlon Brando's private atoll Teti'aroa, where she contemplates the evidence of the planet's demise and consoles herself with the lesson from geology that reefs have come and gone throughout the history of the Earth.

"Whatever role we might play in the next great extinction will surely have less effect on the tenacious reemergence of reef-builders than it will on us. Reefs, we know, can survive without us. The opposite may not be true."

Julia Whitty has a lovely voice, but it's a voice bringing dire warnings that we had better heed soon.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Swimming with the Swami, June 13, 2007
By Karen Laws (Berkeley, CA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
"All day we have been observing the surgeonfish..." Julia Whitty begins, and from that first sentence onward, the reader of "The Fragile Edge" is one of the party. Whitty is there with you, chuckling good-naturedly at the antics of an undersea creature or (more likely) of those crazy humans topside. In one of my favorite moments, an account of how the funky old hotel with its peculiar charms has been taken over by new owners whose pampered guests pay $500/night to lounge by the infinity pool is interrupted just at the moment when you think she might succumb to sentimentality or some other curmudgeonly temptation by her confession that, "I like the pool, too." Similarly, Whitty clearly and firmly presents her environmental concerns without, so to speak, wallowing in them. Instead of putting the book aside because you're tired of hearing about how the end of the world is at hand, you're motivated to keep swimming along with a guide whose curiosity and expertise extend to the natural history of molecular plants and animals, as well as the more glamorous sharks and dolphins, from Western science to Eastern metaphysics, and from dissolving atolls and bleached corals to the raw fish marinated in coconut milk served at a Tuvaluan wedding reception. Finally it's her love of the coral reefs she has come to know over many years of diving and study, rather than her fear that global warming will destroy them, that Whitty is most eager to share.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wondrous, If Vicarious, Adventures In The Deep Thanks To Julia Whitty, June 1, 2007
By Jill Koenigsdorf (Santa Fe, New Mexico) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
What a treat to enter the underwater worlds of the South Pacific with documentary filmaker Julia Whitty as your guide! The writing is absolutely gorgeous: "The humphead wrasse who the Tahitians call mara and the French call Napoleon is an imposing fish up to seven feet long and four hundred and twenty pounds, with an overhanging forehead, thick lips, and a blue body overlaid with squiggly patterns of green and yellow that look like the inside of a crcuit board." It is easy enough to get lost in the descriptions of life in the reef, up close and personal, but Whitty doesn't stop there. She brings in philosophy, Darwin, yoga, the history of the people on the islands she decribes, and Buddhism, as she observes life in the reefs, so that the reader feels she is not merely observing what's before her but contemplating it, trying to understand its mysteries. She makes the more humorous sides of this underwater world come alive, all the while getting her message across of the dire straights the worlds coral reefs are currently in. She has a vast knowledge of fish and reef life but makes it accessable, even providing a glossary at the back for the layperson so you come away with new knowledge about worlds you might otherwise never know. I loved this book!!!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Best and most effective overview of the implications of global warming
I truly admire Julia Whitty's writing style and ability to transport me emotively into the world of the South Pacific ocean and to articulate so clearly why we should all be... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Jan Schiller

5.0 out of 5 stars The Fragile Edge
The Fragile Edge by Julia Whitty combines a science journalist's capacity for a precise and illuminating description of undersea flora and fauna encountered in remoter parts of... Read more
Published 18 months ago by Tim Moses

5.0 out of 5 stars Joy and Sadness
I grew up in this world of tropical coral reefs and sharks and tiny bright fish but that was over fifty years ago. Read more
Published 23 months ago by Ronald Mayo

5.0 out of 5 stars Edginess Long Overdue
Ten years ago I had the opportunity to snorkel with a marine biologist in East Africa. He was studying the bleaching of coral reefs and his worries about the future of marine life... Read more
Published on May 25, 2007 by Eric Goldscheider

5.0 out of 5 stars magical
Wow, i have never been to the south seas and I am not even a diver, but this book absolutely transported me through the waves to the world below the surface. Read more
Published on May 22, 2007 by Karen R. Jones

5.0 out of 5 stars Unique Insight
The extraordinary thing about Julia Whitty's book is that it allows the reader a unique view into the underwater world of the coral reef. Read more
Published on May 17, 2007 by Hardy Jones

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