Pacific: Silicon Chips and Surfboards, Coral Reefs and Atom Bombs, Brutal Dictators and Fading Empires
D**L
Takes more than a drop to make an ocean
Detailed and interesting.
D**R
Different from Atlantic, but enthralling and informative. A typically excellent read.
Winchester has a history of readable, informative, fascinating books, and I've read them all. Each is different, of course, as the subject is different, but there's a general narrative arc in all that is consistent. When I picked up Pacific, though, I was expecting something along the lines of his previous Atlantic, but this one is quite a bit different. Whereas Atlantic focussed on the domination of the ocean by European powers, and how this reflected the larger geopolitics of the age, Pacific takes a look along more economic grounds than historical. That doesn't mean the history isn't here: it is, just muted a bit.While you could argue Pacific history goes back even further than Atlantic, considering things like the Polynesians and the migrations across land masses in the Pacific area, and that does get touched on, the focus is more around the rise and domination of the big player in the area: China. Yes, there's the detours to the Pitcairns and similar outposts, a look at the Panama canal and its effect on world trade, and a glance at the Korean peninsular, there's more focus on Japan in the 20th century and China in the 21st as the defining superpowers of the current age. It's all a fascinating read, from many aspects, and written in Winchester's usual readable style. This isn't a thin, light book, but it is eminently interesting, informative, and challenging in that it makes you think. That's what a great book should do. Another excellent book from Simon Winchester!
H**T
Forget the guy in the beer commercial; Simon Winchester is the most interesting man in the world.
We heard Simon Winchester speak in Portland this winter. I agree with the man who introduced him: Forget about the guy in the beer commercial - Simon Winchester is the real most interesting man in the world. In a chapter about the Philippines he recounts (in a footnote) about a time when he and a friend climbed the mountain with a couple of guides: "As we neared the summit, a full gale blew up and the guides ran away in terror. The two of us pressed on, clambering the final few hundred feet to the crater lip on hour hands and knees, drenched by rain and pummeled by high winds. We later found our guides huddled in a cave, quite incapacitated by smoking so much marijuana that we were obliged to reverse roles and guide them down to safety." [Loc 8388]Simon Winchester has travelled extensively and studied exhaustively to bring up a fascinating book on the geography, history, politics, geology, weather, sociology, and more about this largest body of water (by far) on the planet. "The vast distances inherent in the Pacific's geography have consequences seldom known elsewhere. Consider the Republic of Kiribati, for instance, once the British-run Gilbert Islands. Its one hundred thousand inhabitants are spread over fully 1.35 million square miles of ocean." [Loc 565] Added to this the International Date Line runs through the ocean making people just hundreds of miles away operating on two completely different days.Winchester picks 10 events that have occurred since 1950 to open a discussion on the myriad aspects of the ocean, and our world. "The future, in short, is what the Pacific Ocean is now coming to symbolize. For if one accepts that the Mediterranean was once the island sea of the Ancient World; and further, that the Atlantic Ocean was, and to some people still remains, the inland sea of the Modern World; then surely it can be argued that the Pacific Ocean is the inland sea of Tomorrow's World." [Loc 621]The Pacific Ocean has been with us for millions of years so why pick 1950 as the starting point for this book? Because January 1, 1950 has been identified as the beginning of "Present Time". Our current dating system, with its BC and AD nomenclature, is based on the birth of Christ - a person that the majority of the world don't follow. But something happened in the 1950s that radically changed the baseline system of measurement of time - radio carbon dating. Knowing the half-life of the carbon-14 isotope means we can accurately determine the age of dead animal or plant by comparing the ratio of the stable carbon-12 isotope with its volatile cousin carbon-14. "But then came the unexpected. As soon as the testing of atomic bombs began in earnest in the 1950s, that baseline figure [ratio] suddenly began to change." With a changing ratio, it becomes impossible to identify the age of something. "A date was chosen before which radiocarbon dating could be regarded as accurate, because the baseline was constant... And the date selected - of what is now known as the start of the standard reference year, or the Index Year - was January 1, 1950. Before January 1950 the atmosphere was radiochemically pure. After January 1950 it was sullied, fouled by bomb-created isotopes." [Locs 80, 812].From this introduction Winchester launches into a fascinating chapter on the H-Bomb testing era. With little thought about the well-being of the native inhabitants the United States moved island populations to terrible locations so we could test our bombs. He points out that "the native people have won precious few benefits from all the centuries of foreign attention. Critics claim, not unreasonably, that all that was brought by the years of foreign trespass in the Micronesian islands has been death, disease, and dependency; its residue remains, and it is not a pretty site. Particularly on the atoll knows as Kwajalein."[Loc 469]In other chapters Winchester takes up topics such as surfing, portable radios, North Korea (told through the story of the Pueblo Incident), huge typhoons, life at its depths, and China's recent play to take control of vast portions of the ocean.Typhoons and other storms in the Pacific Ocean are much more numerous and violent than in the other oceans. And they are getting worse. "The best explanation for why the Pacific storms are now more numerous and violent has much to do with the ocean's vast size and, most crucially, with the near-unimaginable amount of heat that its waters collect from the sun." [Loc 3794] He points out that En Niño has a see-saw pattern: "floods on one side of the ocean led to drought on the other." [Loc 3885]. "[T]he Japanese team working on El Niño has been able to show that the onset ... is often preceded by a machine-gun-like series of small and intense storms north of Australia... But as to whether they indicate the onset of an El Niño, or whether they are the result of the onset of an El Niño, is a matter of much debate in the meteorological community."[Loc 3958]He writes about the discovery of life near the hot vents at the bottom of the ocean far beyond the reach of the sun and photosynthesis. "Somehow these bacteria were manufacturing organic material (sustenance for the tube worms) out of inorganic building blocks. Making life, in other words, out of purely elemental whole cloth."[Loc 4876] "It was a truly edge-of-your-seat scientific advance. Before this, the scientific community believed that all life ultimately demanded energy radiated from the sun, that the process of photosynthesis, in which light is an absolutely essential component, lay at the base of all living existence." [Loc 4887]Winchester also points out how a volcano eruption in the Philippines led to the departure of American forces from Subic Bay and Clark Air Force base which in turn led to China being able to increase it's military and economic reach. I have heard of China establishing new islands and of America's turning to a "Pacific First" strategy. This chapter is a great introduction on the why and how. "These days the planet is witnessing a sudden and wholesale redistribution of world power, on that is unprecedented inits speed. It is experiencing a shift in emphasis that suggest that this Western dominance, especially in the regions where such was both unquestioned and unquestionable, may now, and quite rapidly, be coming to an end." [Loc 6244]This book is epic in scope. The subtitle is: "Silicon Chips and Surfboards, Coral Reefs and Atom Bombs, Brutal Dictators, Fading Empires, and the Coming Collision of the World's Superpowers"In the wrong hands, this material could be dry and insufferable. But in Simon Winchester's able hands we have an enjoyable journey through these remarkable topics.
R**R
A very interesting read...
This book details the importance of the Pacific area by making each chapter a short story of a particular part of the area or a reason for it being of historical significance. You learn much of the area and, unfortunately, how we are treating it poorly moving forward.
M**D
Pacific: A far vaster ocean than the Atlantic presented in a less coherent book
Simon Winchester's "Pacific: Silicon Chips and Surfboards, Coral Reefs and Atom Bombs, Brutal Dictators, Fading Empires, and the Coming Collision of the World's Superpowers" signals via its title that this companion book is radically different from the same author's book on the Atlantic Ocean. That earlier study, published in 2010, opened hundreds of million years ago with the formation of the world's oceans and continents, the first movement of ancient man down to life by the seashore, and the early navigation of blue waters. In contrast, as Winchester explains in an author's note, the start line for "Pacific" is 1 January 1950, the dawn of the thermonuclear age and the first of ten events chosen for the subject matter of the book's ten chapters.As is typical in Winchester's books, "Pacific" benefits from fine, and occasionally even poetic, prose. Its organization, however, is more than a bit puzzling, for creating a list of ten events provides no guarantee of thematic relevance. In this case, the book moves back and forth from a concentration on the ocean itself and countries that sometimes just happen to be located in the Pacific basin. In "Atlantic," Winchester's organizing theme was Shakespeare's Seven Ages of Man, which paralleled the book's chronological flow and mankind's progressive mastery of the Atlantic. Less successful is Winchester's use here of the event-driven hook which gives the impression that "Pacific" is a compilation of ten separately conceived and delivered lectures.Chapter 1 addresses the thermonuclear age, but then follow a study of Japan's development of radio technology and the pleasures of a laid-back lifestyle in Hawaii. Chapter 4 returns to a country focus, in this instance the paranoid regime of North Korea. Then it is on to three chapters that look at Hong Kong, long but no-longer a British outpost, storms in southern Pacific climes, and Australia.Chapter 8 deals with deep-sea exploration and the Pacific's volcanoes and plate tectonics, material that plays to Winchester's Oxford University training in geology. Chapter 9 concerns environmental problems, while Chapter 10, the most timely of all in a strategic sense, addresses the dangerous, largely Chinese-driven competition for expanded control of territorial waters. In summing up, my preference would have been to have learned even more about the Pacific as a platform for mineral exploitation and earth science study and as a stage for Law of the Sea issues. Some other readers may instead welcome the greater attention that Winchester pays throughout the book to country studies, and for them "Pacific" as presented may well be a standout achievement.
Trustpilot
3 days ago
3 weeks ago