schout's review

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hopeful informative reflective medium-paced

4.25

rmarcin's review against another edition

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4.0

I was asked to read Beautiful Swimmers for our book club. I really enjoyed reading this book about the history of the watermen on the Chesapeake Bay, the blue crab and its life cycles, and the islands on the Eastern Shore of Maryland and Virginia. It was interesting to read about the declining trade and the erosion due to the increase in population. The book is wonderfully descriptive, I enjoyed learning about the various subtleties in color between the male and female crabs. I learned a lot about the blue crabs that I have enjoyed my entire life, growing up in Maryland. The sheer physicality of the watermen, and the time on the water to prep and collect their trade was very interesting.
I liked the illustrations in this version, and the afterword, updating the effects of erosion on the community and the seafood trade. Quite an interesting way of life.
#BeautifulSwimmers #WilliamWWarner

larryerick's review against another edition

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3.0

So, there you are, in 2017, reading a 1994 reprint edition of a 1977 Pulitzer Prize winning book in non-fiction. You've already lost the interest of millions of potential readers who believe the only good book is a fictional one, or at least a non-fictional one structured to feel just like a fictional one, with a clear plot, central characters, and the rest. To be sure, this is not one of those books written -- how should I say it? -- with lots of creative flair. Then, to add to its problems, it is full of very dated comments about the economy of its day, when prices and wages were dramatically different from today. However, for me, that is all almost besides the point. The author is presenting the intricate interactions of creatures and people in the vast, complex ecosystem of the Chesapeake Bay. First, it has going for it that this reader lives and has spent much time on the water in the fairly comparable Puget Sound and Salish Sea area. There is lots to draw upon for interest. Secondly, being someone who still vividly remembers stopping on a simple but typical two-lane highway and paying only 25 cents a gallon for gasoline during especially contentious price wars, this reader can adjust more quickly than many others much younger to the seemingly bizarre monetary figures thrown about in this book. (Only a couple bucks for a pound of crab, indeed!) And yet, most importantly, the author is so patiently thorough in his investigation of his subject, that his writing eventually wins the reader over. He has just enough background in the subject to know what he doesn't know and how to go about learning the most he can about what he needs to know. In this case, this is a book concentrating on "watermen" making a living on seafood harvesting. Imagine yourself, perhaps, as a person whose mother was a good cook and allowed you to participate fully, as a child, in preparing a variety of foods for family meals. What foods? What kind to buy? What was a good price? What equipment used to prepare them, to cook them? In the author's case, he was brought up on the waters of the Bay, and he almost instinctively knew how to approach and spend time with these watermen. (There is one chapter on his time with a particular crabber that is worth the price of admission all on its own, and there are others nearly as good.) In essence, he was offered a chance to spend a lot of time with his own equivalent of "top chefs" and has passed along what he learned to us. The journey into the ecology, the economy, the personalities, the localities, is ultimately very satisfying.

refvemma's review against another edition

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5.0

Wow- I finished it! Byron got me this book in like 2015 bc it is very good (Pulitzer!) and involves an estuary (my favorite ecosystem!). I get weird with other ppl telling me how to live my book life and I’m even weirder about nonfiction so it’s taken me until now to actually read it. I’m glad I did. Excellent history of a lifestyle surrounding the blue crabs of the Chesapeake. I learned a lot about the bay, the people, and the blue crabs!

anoraborealis's review against another edition

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4.0

Between this and the Lobster Chronicles, I feel like becoming a waterman (person?)

jamie_toomai's review against another edition

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4.0

Part anthropological study of Chesapeake Bay watermen culture, and part ecological study of the blue crabs on which they make their living. Fascinating, and well written.

bookhails's review

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adventurous informative reflective sad slow-paced

3.0

gretafaith's review

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1.0

This book is for crab perverts and crab perverts alone. It is 304 pages of boring, useless information. It includes the author bragging about what other watermen think of him, pointless information about what direction the water is going and how salty it is, and, of course, the horrifically detailed description of crab mating. The best parts, if you have to choose them, are the pictures because they give you a break from the disgusting writing. If you aren't assigned this for school (like I was), please, spare yourself the misery of reading this piece of trash. This book is truly literary Ambien.

whitehousedotcom's review

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2.0

Had to read this for school. Guess what? I don't give a fuck about crabs! Or the people that catch them! Woah!

Also, if I hear one more person say "I'm a vegetarian, but I eat fish sometimes," I will destroy them thanks to this book. The seafood business is fucked up. Surprise? Nah.

Yeah, fuck this book.
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