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Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded: August 27, 1883 Paperback – July 5, 2005
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The bestselling author of The Professor and the Madman and The Map That Changed the World examines the enduring and world-changing effects of the catastrophic eruption off the coast of Java of the earth's most dangerous volcano -- Krakatoa.
The legendary annihilation in 1883 of the volcano-island of Krakatoa -- the name has since become a byword for a cataclysmic disaster -- was followed by an immense tsunami that killed nearly forty thousand people. Beyond the purely physical horrors of an event that has only very recently been properly understood, the eruption changed the world in more ways than could possibly be imagined. Dust swirled round die planet for years, causing temperatures to plummet and sunsets to turn vivid with lurid and unsettling displays of light. The effects of the immense waves were felt as far away as France. Barometers in Bogotá and Washington, D.C., went haywire. Bodies were washed up in Zanzibar. The sound of the island's destruction was heard in Australia and India and on islands thousands of miles away. Most significant of all -- in view of today's new political climate -- the eruption helped to trigger in Java a wave of murderous anti-Western militancy among fundamentalist Muslims: one of the first outbreaks of Islamic-inspired killings anywhere.
Simon Winchester's long experience in the world wandering as well as his knowledge of history and geology give us an entirely new perspective on this fascinating and iconic event as he brings it telling back to life.
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarper Perennial
- Publication dateJuly 5, 2005
- Dimensions8.1 x 5.5 x 1.1 inches
- ISBN-100060838590
- ISBN-13978-0060838591
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“Brilliant...One of the best books ever written about the history and significance of a natural disaster.” — New York Times
“Supremely well told: a fine exception to the dull run of most geological writing.” starred Kirkus Review — Kirkus Review (starred review)
“Winchester once again demonstrates a keen knack for balancing rich and often rigorous historical detail with dramatic tension and storytelling.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“A good read.” — Washington Post Book World
“Masterful build-up of literary and geological tension.” — The Economist
“A real-life story bigger than any Hollywood blockbuster.” — Entertainment Weekly
“Winchester...is noted for his ability to turn scholarly history into engrossing narrative.” — Chicago Sun-Times
“Winchester’s exceptional attention to detail never falters.” — San Francisco Chronicle
“Winchester scores.” (byline Baltimore Sun, printed in Pittsburg Post-Gazette) — Baltimore Sun
“Winchester dramatically delivers...the book is absorbing...” — Daily News
“A rattling good read.” — Boston Sunday Globe
“Krakatoa is a pleasure from beginning to end.” — Boston Sunday Globe
“The rich and fascinating KRAKATOA confirms [Winchester’s] preeminence. Janet Maslin — International Herald Tribune
From the Back Cover
Simon Winchester, New York Times bestselling author of The Professor and the Madman, examines the legendary annihilation in 1883 of the volcano-island of Krakatoa, which was followed by an immense tsunami that killed nearly forty thousand people. The effects of the immense waves were felt as far away as France. Barometers in Bogotá and Washington, D.C., went haywire. Bodies were washed up in Zanzibar. The sound of the island's destruction was heard in Australia and India and on islands thousands of miles away. Most significant of all -- in view of today's new political climate -- the eruption helped to trigger in Java a wave of murderous anti-Western militancy among fundamentalist Muslims, one of the first outbreaks of Islamic-inspired killings anywhere. Krakatoa gives us an entirely new perspective on this fascinating and iconic event.
This P.S. edition features an extra 16 pages of insights into the book, including author interviews, recommended reading, and more.
About the Author
Simon Winchester is the acclaimed author of many books, including The Professor and the Madman, The Men Who United the States, The Map That Changed the World, The Man Who Loved China, A Crack in the Edge of the World, and Krakatoa, all of which were New York Times bestsellers and appeared on numerous best and notable lists. In 2006, Winchester was made an officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) by Her Majesty the Queen. He resides in western Massachusetts.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Krakatoa
The Day the World Exploded: August 27, 1883By Winchester, SimonPerennial
ISBN: 0060838590Chapter One
"An Island with a Pointed Mountain"
Though we think first of Java as an eponym for coffee (or, to some today, a computer language), it is in fact the trading of aromatic tropical spices on which the fortunes of the great island's colonizers and Western discoverers were first founded. And initially supreme among those spices was the one rather ordinary variety that remains the most widely used today: pepper.
Piper nigrum, Syzygium aromaticum, and Myristica fragrans -- pepper, clove, and nutmeg -- were the original holy trinity of the Asian spice trade. Each was familiar to, and used by, the ancients. Two hundred years before the birth of Christ, for instance, the Chinese of the Han Dynasty demanded that their courtiers address their emperors only when their breath had been sweetened with a mouthful of Javanese cloves, the ?odiferous pistils,? as they were later more widely known. There is some vague evidence that Roman priests may have employed nutmeg as an incense; it was definitely in use as a flavoring in ninth-century Constantinople, since the terrifyingly Orthodox Saint Theodore the Studite -- the scourge of the image-smashing Iconoclasts -- famously allowed his monks to sprinkle it on the pease pudding they were obliged to eat on days when monastery meat was forbidden. And in Elizabethan times a nutmeg pomander was an essential for keeping foul ailments at bay: The notion that nutmeg could ward off the plague survived longer than many another old wives' tale.
Pepper, though, was of infinitely more moment to the ancients than to be merely a topping, nostrum, or cachou. The Romans used it in abundance: Gibbon wrote of pepper being ?a favourite ingredient of the most expensive Roman cookery,? and added his authority to the widely held idea that Alaric, the rambunctious king of the Visigoths, had demanded more than a ton of it from the Romans as ransom when he laid siege to the city in a.d. 410. The aureus and the denarius, the gold and silver coins of the empire, became the preferred currency of the Spice Route, and the Indian pepper merchants of Cochin and Malacca and the ports of southern Ceylon were said to be impressed that the denomination of coins was indicated by the number engraved upon them, not by their size.
However they may have been denominated, the coins must have been paid out in enormous numbers. Pepper was so precious and costly and so much in demand that the cost of it all had Pliny the Elder fulminating. ?There was no year in which India? -- and by this he meant the Indies, since pepper traded came both from the Malabar Coast and from western Java -- ?does not drain the Roman empire of fifty million sesterces.? So dearly, he added drily, ?do we pay for our luxury and our women.?
(There is a pleasing symmetry about Pliny's involvement in this part of the story of Krakatoa, even if he appears in only a walk-on role. Although this rich and well-connected former soldier -- he was a cavalry officer in Roman Germany -- happily took on a variety of official duties on behalf of his emperors, Pliny was above all else a naturalist. He was a savant, or a student, as he once famously put it, of ?the nature of things, that is, life.? His reputation is based largely on his thirty-seven-volume Natural History, an immense masterpiece in which, among countless other delights, is the first use of the word from which we derive today's encyclopedia.
It was during the late summer of a.d. 79, while pursuing his official task of investigating piracy in the Bay of Naples, that Pliny was persuaded to explore a peculiar cloud formation that appeared to be coming from the summit of the local mountain, Vesuvius. He was duly rowed ashore, visited a local village to calm the panicked inhabitants -- and was promptly caught up in a massive eruption. He died of asphyxiation by volcanic gases on August 24, leaving behind him a vast reputation and, as memorial, a single word in the lexicon of modern vulcanology, Plinian. A Plinian eruption is now defined as an almighty, explosive eruption that all but destroys the entire volcano from which it emanates. And the most devastating Plinian event of the modern era occurred 1,804 years, almost to the day, after Pliny the Elder's death: at Krakatoa.)
Pepper has a confused reputation. There is no truth, for example, in the widely held belief that it was once used to hide the taste of putrefying meat; this charming thought perhaps derives from the equally delightful notion, still recognized by pharmacists today, that pepper can be used as a carminative, a potion that expels flatulence. But it was very much used as a preservative, and more commonly still as a seasoning. By the tenth century it was being imported into England; the Guild of Pepperers, one of the most ancient of London's city guilds, was established at least before 1180, which was when the body was first recorded (they were in court for some minor infraction); by 1328 the guild had been formally registered as an importer of spices in large, or gross, amounts: its members were called grossarii, from which comes the modern word grocer.Joseph Conrad caught the obsession, in Lord Jim:
The seventeenth-century traders went there for pepper, because the passion for pepper seemed to burn like a flame of love in the breast of Dutch and English adventurers about the time of James the First. Where wouldn't they go for pepper! For a bag of pepper they would cut each other's throats without hesitation, and would forswear their souls, of which they were so careful otherwise: the bizarre obstinacy of that desire made them defy death in a thousand shapes; the unknown seas, the loathsome and strange diseases; wounds, captivity, hunger, pestilence, and despair. It made them great! By heavens! it made them heroic . . .
Continues...Excerpted from Krakatoaby Winchester, Simon Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- Publisher : Harper Perennial; 1st Harper Perennial Ed. Publ. 2005 edition (July 5, 2005)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0060838590
- ISBN-13 : 978-0060838591
- Item Weight : 12.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 8.1 x 5.5 x 1.1 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #179,101 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #10 in Seismology
- #15 in Earthquakes & Volcanoes (Books)
- #94 in Natural Disasters (Books)
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About the author

Simon Winchester studied geology at Oxford and has written for Condé Nast Traveler, Smithsonian, and National Geographic. Simon Winchester's many books include The Professor and the Madman ; The Map that Changed the World ; Krakatoa; and A Crack in the Edge of the World. Each of these have both been New York Times bestsellers and appeared on numerous best and notable lists. Mr. Winchester was made Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) by HM The Queen in 2006. He lives in Massachusetts and in the Western Isles of Scotland.
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By author Simon Winchester's reckoning, there have been only five geologic explosions of the magnitude of Krakatoa in the history of the planet, and he can barely contain his pleasure that one [thankfully, only one] of these events took place in our lifetime, relatively speaking. For indeed this is one of the compelling facets of the work, the availability of modern communications and scientific instrumentation and their role in both reporting and deciphering the event. Transoceanic telegraph lines, seismographs, motorized shipping, and barometers all play invaluable roles in this work.
Before rushing into superlatives about the magnitude and destructiveness of the explosion, a word about this literary genre. "Disaster stories" present the historian with particular problems. Cataclysms occur in a context. An author must strike a balance between an inadequate set-up and a distracting one. In his splendid history of the Johnstown Flood, David McCullough devotes about 40% of his text to the build-up of the actual catastrophe, which gives the reader the added opportunity of making informed "before and after" assessments.
Winchester places the final paroxysm of Krakotoa over 50% of the way into his work. Admittedly, this is a substantial "set-up" but for this circumstance a justifiable one. Before the molten Armageddon the author takes us on a detailed, insightful, humorous and colorful journey through several centuries of Dutch colonization of Indonesia, the biological curiosities of the region, and of course the underground politics of the earth's crust. The author's explanation of plate tectonics-the movements of continental pieces that ultimately cause the earthquakes and volcanic eruptions at the earth's surface-is worthy of special note. It is surprising to learn that the major forces of the earth's crust are down, and not up, and that certain regions of the oceans' shorelines are particularly vulnerable to tectonic instability. For the 35,000 or more residents of Java and elsewhere who lost their lives to the explosion, this is a regrettable geographic reality.
Krakatoa itself suffered a bad reputation long before the 1883 denouement. One of a string of islands that borders the Sudra Strait in the Dutch East Indies, its volcanic unpredictability was well known-and at times quite visible-to the more populous trade centers of Java and Sumatra. Winchester observed that the island was generally avoided and in 1883 uninhabited. By the few descriptions extant, and present-day photos of its sister islands, Krakatoa reminds the reader of that unnamed island in the 1930's film "King Kong."
But the desolation of Krakatoa was the exception more than the rule. The territories of the Dutch East Indies were generally farmed for spices and other produce. International commerce was strong during the Dutch hegemony, the Sudra Strait a veritable highway of commerce. By 1883 international telegraph service had reached Java. The Dutch appear to have created European cultural enclaves in their major outpost cities, blissfully unaware that resentment toward them by a devoted Islamic population was brewing into its own volcano of sorts. Winchester has a touch for the subtleties of colonial life, including the visit of a world famous circus to Batavia, on the mainland across from Krakatoa. The circus's baby elephant, for some reason smuggled into a suite of an elegant hotel, became unnerved, apparently by earth tremors, and destroyed the suite. The circus's liability would become a moot point in less than twelve hours.
How massive was the Krakatoan blast? It created a tsunami that killed tens of thousands in Southeast Asia. Incredibly it then continued across the Indian Ocean, around Africa, and maintained measurable status as far as the English Channel. The explosion created an atmospheric shock wave that circled the earth seven times, clearly measurable in observatories at Greenwich and Toronto, among other sites. The dust thrown into the atmosphere altered atmospheric colorings for months and produced a unique genre of painting. A fire department in the Hudson Valley of New York State scurried toward a forest fire which proved to be a lighting effect from an unusual red sunset. No one denies the decades old assertion that Krakatoa was the loudest noise in the history of mankind.
The explosion of Krakatoa delivered considerable seismic shocks to the scientific and religious communities as well. Those who lived through the terror in Sumatra and Java tended to read apocalyptic significance into the event. Muslims, in particular, interpreted Krakatoa as a call to religious and national purity, and the resulting renewal quickly erupted into armed revolt against the Dutch. Scientists, on the other hand, would be intrigued when a new island, Anak Krakatoa, arose over the original site in 1930. Anak, along with defoliated sister islands of the old Krakatoa, became a source of intense fascination as a kind of biological clean slate, and development of vegetative and animal life was charted with considerable interest, unfortunately interrupted by World War II and later by political instability in Indonesia. Forests and wildlife rapidly propagated through airborne spores and simple swimming of species from the mainland. In his last chapter the author describes a very recent visit to Anak Krakatoa, now highly rugged and volcanically active. The sacrifice of his picnic lunch to an aggressive monitor lizard convinces author and reader alike that the Krakatoan legacy is very much alive.
What clung to my mind the most was that Krakatoa is NOT gone since this is a Subduction Factory, constantly drawing in source materials for the "Next" Krakatoa, which appeared and was nicknamed Son of Krakatoa, as mentioned in "National Geographic" in their article about the Angry Gods of Indonesia. This reminds me of oatmeal in the morning as it heats up and begins to bubble and then burst from time to time.
What I liked the most was the historical mentions of the East India Corporation and how they were able to snatch world dominance in the seas and oceans with their spices. Also, the tectonic plate coverage was illuminating. I hope people understand TODAY that this is VERY important as we are ALL sitting on one plate or another and they are ALL beginning to move due to the warming of the Ring of Fire. This is all vital info to the world since the next eruption of Krakatoa Jr. can help trigger the lighting of the ENTIRE Ring which will devastate mankind and most living beings. Once Lake Tabo in Indonesia and the Caldera in Argentina and the OTHER Caldera in Wyoming at Yosemite ignite, it will blacken the skies and blot out the light, killing plants and animals across the globe.
For those who do not think that earthquakes can become an even BIGGER problem in the years to come, watch Sept 25th, this month, when a HUGE quake is expected somewhere on the planet. Please note that we are all becoming used to 6.0 quakes but are you ready for 15 and 16.0's ? The Super Quakes to come will be devastational. For the lastest quake reports in your area go to: [...] , click the link at the top of the page that refers to Earthquakes, then follow the top link on the next page generated. Before 2009 we were having no more than 20 quakes per day but that has gone up to as high as 200 or more quakes daily throughout the world.
History repeats itself and Winchester points out when, where, and how to be careful and watchful. The site where the original Krakatoa sat is one of those sites. All of Indonesia is at risk of disappearing and New Zealand may also disappear soon ... Christ Church was just the beginning, according to Winchester.
The fact that stone buildings that had stood across from Krakatoa for hundreds of years were devastated in ONE wave is enough to beg homage to the great Earth Mother ... the fact that the sound wave went around the planet SEVEN times is incredible ... and the tsunamis that followed were gigantic. Winchester painted well, the fear and the terror as the water kept rising and rising and nothing could stop it or even slow it down. It came on regardless. I have been on the beach as a child, running from tidal waves that were only a couple of inches tall but they managed to chase me almost to the cliffs, hundreds of yards.
I was bored to tears for the necessary first 100 pages ... but as the story unfolds I must give Winchester a "Standing Bravo!" His writing is superb, his style unique, his descriptions painted the imagined horror to perfection.
I definitely recommend this book to anyone interested in watching the current developments as 2012 comes up to speed, or is interested in the history of the Dutch and the East Indies Company, or how volcanoes are created and how Krakatoa was NOT your average volcano ... nor will be Krakatoa Jr. Buy this book and have your children read it when you are done. Great Read!
The 4 stars are thanks to the dragging first 100 pages, and it was almost 200 pages, but as an intro it was mandatory and added to the excitement.
The good
Geological information, which all came together in the 1960s and I got to learn in 1975. Nice review
The power of communications as telegraphs and transoceanic wires allowed information to flow fast. Thanks in part to rubber protecting the metal. Yeah, we get into weeds.
How the region was colonized over centuries for spices which eventually the Dutch dominated
This all brought Islam to the region circa 1220 to 1300. He there is more perhaps, a whole chapter on how Krakatoa led to possible revolts.
And the fun part, the volcano erupts and the it blows up. Pumice everywhere. Hey, it floats!
The science after the explosion is good stuff.
Readers may want to skim over some parts.









