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“In Tears of Mermaids, Stephen G. Bloom tells the history of the pearl trade down to the present day, focusing in particular on the harvesting and marketing of pearls in today's global markets. As Mr. Bloom makes clear, pearls are still big business, with dealers routinely exchanging hundreds of thousands of dollars at a time for just the right ones. And certain pearls command astonishing prices. One striking quality of pearls, Mr. Bloom tells us, is the aesthetic rapport they form with their wearers, absorbing body heat and seeming to glow and reflect luminescence onto the skin. For millennia, only the wealthiest members of society could hope to know this quality first-hand. And now millions of people can.”—Wall Street Journal
“a labor of love and obsession. Bloom was inspired by a necklace his mother would wear only on special occasions and wound up traveling 30,000 miles over four years in his quest to uncover info on the global pearl trade and its origins.”—New York Post
"The most memorable pearls in Tears of Mermaids are not in the necklace Michelle Obama wears, but the ones that are missing. Time after time, a fisherman, diver, or small-scale pearl farmer recalls a tremendous pearl he found on the ocean floor. But they always disappear: lost, sold by a spouse, swindled away by a supposed friend. The fishermen seem upset, but not much. They seem to know, even without an economics class, that the value is not the pearl itself, but the setting."—Orion Magazine
"Bloom, a journalism professor at the University of Iowa, has poured his passion into Tears of Mermaids: The Secret Story of Pearls, a tell-all book about pearls and the network that delivers them to the world's well-dressed women. The more we learn, the more contagious his passion becomes. He introduces characters worthy of a screenplay -- the swaggering Australian pearl lord, the Chinese pearler in her Cadillac and sprayed-on jeans, and the improbable "Rana of Fresno," whose home in a modest subdivision is a treasure chest of rare pearls.a fascinating book."—Minneapolis Star-Tribune
“Anyone who’s ever dreamed about a string of black Tahitians will be enchanted.”—Publishers Weekly
“Bloom's love of pearls—which are, after all, "essentially calcium-coated beads"—allows him to draw back the curtain on the business of dealing in them without ruining his or the reader's pleasure in their charms.”—Library Journal
“A satisfying mixture of history, science and popular culture.”—Kirkus Reviews
“Forget The Treasure of Sierra Madre--gold is so boring when it’s up against the story of pearls. In Tears of Mermaids, Stephen Bloom takes you into a world of bravado and mystery as he traces, in a multi-continent quest, where pearls come from. Bloom, in league with writers who go deeper and practice what I call “method journalism”, did everything but become an oyster to understand pearls. His passion for the pearl is infectious--it will be difficult for you to put this book down.”--Dale Maharidge, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of And Their Children After Them.
“Stephen Bloom takes us into a world so hidden it might as well be underwater. This richly-written book about pearls is about more than the bauble. It is about the human story--both glorious and sad--behind those organic spheres that have been the subject of popular fascination since the discovery of the Americas. An incredible feat of reportage.”--Tom Zoellner, author of The Heartless Stone: A Journey Through the World of Diamonds, Deceit and Desire and Uranium: War, Energy and the Rock that Shaped the World
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Tears Of Mermaids, It's a crying shame,
By Richard W. Wise, G.G. "Author: Secrets Of Th... (Lenox, Massachusetts) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Tears of Mermaids: The Secret Story of Pearls (Hardcover)
First let me say I was a bit put-off by Mr. Bloom's prose style. He is without a doubt an elegant writer, but the glib-gonzo style, which is ok in a short piece, rapidly gets under the skin when stretched out to book length.
Mr. Bloom is a journalist and though journalists are not expected to necessarily be experts on the subjects the write about, they do have a responsibility to thoroughly research the topic and get it right. There are times when Bloom does, but there are times when he does not. His first and most egregious error occurs in his introduction. "Pearl pricing", he says, "is totally subjective ...The same strand can go for three thousand dollars or thirty thousand dollars." Nonsense! Oh yes, there is a fool born every minute, but the fact is that pearls trade in a fairly orderly market. So, absent the fool, no such gap between bid and ask prices exists (or the buyer would be soon out of business). Bloom would have been correct if he had said that there is no universally accepted hierarchical grading nomenclature. That is to say, one dealer may call the finest pearls "AAA", while another may simply start with a single "A". However the basic criteria: size, symmetry, surface, luster, orient and overtone are universal and used by all. Bloom's statements about the people he meets in his travels say a great deal more about Mr. Bloom than they do about his sources. For example, early in the book he meets a survey group, including the celebrated former National Geographic writer Fred Ward who "seemed too important to have anything to do with me." Well, I am familiar with that group and they have one afternoon in which to survey an entire gem show full of pearl dealers. Could it be that Ward was simply focused on his work? Given the book's stated objective, one wonders why his Chapter 5, The Rana of Fresno, was included at all. Bloom takes such obvious pleasure in exposing the foibles, real and imagined, of his sources that, at times, it is difficult to tell if he is truly writing a book about pearls or just an extended gossip column. Bloom's comparison between the pearl and cocaine trade is unfortunate, as are the constant inferences that the pearl trade, and pearl dealers in general, are really quite sleazy. Bloom spends a page and a half justifying the cocaine comparison, finally admitting that "the biggest difference is that the possession of pearls is legal." Cocaine is sold by neighborhood dealers and pearls by local jewelers, hey, no difference there! He might also have mentioned that unlike cocaine, pearls are not reduced in purity at every step along the distribution pipeline, and do not destroy the life of the purchaser-- but that would have ruined the riff. The above issues aside, there is much of value in Bloom's book. Few have the opportunity to spend so much time trying to understand this old and arcane industry. Bloom's first chapter, covering the history of pearls from the time of Columbus, is well researched and provocative. Interesting as well is his chapter on life as a deckhand on a Pearl boat off the Australian coast, though his attempt to capture the Australian argot is ludicrous and his contempt for the working sailors palpable. Yeah Stephen, having been a deckie, I kin tell yuz dat is ezakly the way sailors are "supposed to talk." His chapter on pearl trading in Hong Kong is excellent as is his description of diving off the Jewelmer pearl farm. A looming environmental catastrophe in the Philippines and his last two chapters about his visit to the island of Cubagua (where it all began) are thoughtful and poignant. Had he spent more words discussing real issues of this sort and less time lampooning the hard working people who made his book possible (I am one of those local jewelers), I would have enjoyed it a good deal more. Richard W. Wise, author: The French Blue
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
My Mother's Pearls,
By Allison Martin (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Tears of Mermaids: The Secret Story of Pearls (Hardcover)
TEARS OF MERMAIDS is a detective story, an adventure story,and a primer for those of us wanting to know what is meant by a "natural" pearl, a "cultured" pearl and a "freshwater" pearl. Spurred on by the childhood vision of his mother's pearl necklace, Stephen Bloom traveled 30,000 miles to unravel the secret story of pearls, a story chock-full of greed, cruelty, mystery and breathtaking beauty. Coincidentally, just as I finished reading TEARS, I found a circa 1936 photograph of my mother wearing a black dress and a stunning double-strand of what appeared to be perfectly matched akoya pearls. Wow! I had never seen those pearls before. Where did she get them? She grew up with modest means in a small rural town. And, suddenly, like Bloom, I was mesmerized by the pearls. Now, I have begun my own journey, unraveling the secret of my mother's pearls.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Great Storyteller creates a thriller about pearls,
By harriet schwab "voracious reader" (san francisco) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Tears of Mermaids: The Secret Story of Pearls (Hardcover)
Do I own pearls, no. Did I care to -- before I started reading Tears, no. Do I love a great thriller especially when it is true, absolutely. I am a huge fan of Mark Kurlansky, especially COD and was utterly fascinated by the film, THE RED VIOLIN which followed one Stradivarius over continents and centuries. Well, Stephen Bloom has the gift. Like a great journalist, he knows how to listen, he has tenacity, he is fearless in travel, and he in an astonishing storyteller. From Las Vegas, to Japan, he China, to Australia he goes in search of pearl divers, pearl farmers, pearl sellers of every variety from the wholesalers to the internet sellers. He wants to be on the inside, to talk with the movers and shakers in the pearl world and he achieves that incredible sense of intimacy, like you are learning someone no-one else knows. When we, mankind, from the time of Columbus, used up oyster beds and divers, thoughtlessly, viciously, we moved on to mass production and made it our business to make pearls available to everyone, everywhere. You thought pearls grew, one by excruciating one at a time, in oysters? When the oysters couldn't survive the growing pollution of their waters, we discovered that mussels thrived. And, now, the Chinese are growing dozens of pearls in a single mussel -- BY THE THOUSANDS. The pearls are getting bigger, rounder, more translucent. Do I now want pearls, absolutely. I am seduced by Bloom's passion, by his compelling story of...surprise! ...greed all spurred on by the exquisite beauty of the pearl. Buy this book and then lets get Bloom to create a two week world-wind pearl tour in which we ultimately pay our way by buying and then selling (well maybe we'll have to keep some) pearls...tahitian, golden, akoya, freshwater,cultured....
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