Orca
How We Came to Know and Love the Ocean's Greatest Predator
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Narrated by:
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Paul Heitsch
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By:
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Jason M. Colby
About this listen
Drawing on interviews, official records, private archives, and his own family history, Jason M. Colby tells the exhilarating and often heartbreaking story of how people came to love the ocean's greatest predator.
Historically reviled as dangerous pests, killer whales were dying by the hundreds, even thousands, by the 1950s - the victims of whalers, fishermen, and even the US military. In the Pacific Northwest, fishermen shot them, scientists harpooned them, and the Canadian government mounted a machine gun to eliminate them. But that all changed in 1965, when Seattle entrepreneur Ted Griffin became the first person to swim and perform with a captive killer whale. The show proved wildly popular, and he began capturing and selling others, including Sea World's first Shamu.
Over the following decade, live display transformed views of Orcinus orca. The public embraced killer whales as charismatic and friendly, while scientists enjoyed their first access to live orcas. Yet even as Northwesterners taught the world to love whales, they came to oppose their captivity and to fight for the freedom of a marine predator that had become a regional icon.
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The paths of the great American robber barons were paved with riches, and though ordinary citizens paid for them, they also profited. Les Standiford, author of the John Deal thrillers, tells how the man who turned Florida's swamps into the playgrounds of the rich performed the almost superhuman feat of building a railroad from the mainland to Key West at the turn of the century.
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A Pleasant Surprise
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Sealab
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Sealab is the underwater Right Stuff: the compelling story of how a U.S. Navy program sought to develop the marine equivalent of the space station - and forever changed man's relationship to the sea. While NASA was trying to put a man on the moon, the U.S. Navy launched a series of daring experiments to prove that divers could live and work from a sea-floor base.
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An excellent story of adventure and discovery.
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The Dragon Behind the Glass
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A young man is murdered for his prized pet fish. An Asian tycoon buys a single specimen for $150,000. Meanwhile, a pet detective chases smugglers through the streets of New York. Delving into an outlandish realm of obsession, paranoia, and criminality, The Dragon Behind the Glass tells the story of a fish like none other: a powerful predator dating to the age of the dinosaurs.
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A "must read" for all fish professionals.
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Ice Ghosts weaves together the epic story of the Lost Franklin Expedition of 1845 - whose two ships and crew of 129 were lost to the Arctic ice - with the modern tale of the scientists, divers, and local Inuit behind the incredible discovery of the flagship's wreck in 2014. Paul Watson, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who was on the icebreaker that led the discovery expedition, tells a fast-paced historical adventure story: Sir John Franklin and the crew of the HMS Erebus and Terror setting off in search of the fabled Northwest Passage.
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Flawed Writing Dashes High Hopes :(
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The Humane Economy
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A major new exploration of the economics of animal exploitation and a practical road map for how we can use the marketplace to promote the welfare of all living creatures from the renowned animal-rights advocate Wayne Pacelle, president and CEO of the Humane Society of the United States and New York Times best-selling author of The Bond.
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For all lovers of animals--even the most sensitive
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The Gulf
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When painter Winslow Homer first sailed into the Gulf of Mexico, he was struck by its "special kind of providence." Indeed, the Gulf presented itself as America's sea - bound by geography, culture, and tradition to the national experience - and yet, there has never been a comprehensive history of the Gulf until now. And so, in this rich and original work that explores the Gulf through our human connection with the sea, environmental historian Jack E. Davis finally places this exceptional region into the American mythos in a sweeping history that extends from the Pleistocene age to the 21st century.
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Decolonize gulf history
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Raising the Hunley
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"Forget the Titanic; this sub wreck is hot," says the Wall Street Journal. Award-winning journalists Hicks and Kropf offer new insights into the dramatic history and mysterious disappearance of the Hunley, the first submersible to sink another ship. The Hunley represented one of the major technological breakthroughs of the Civil War, and it has fascinated many to the point of obsession ever since its disappearance.
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Great Civil War history
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Close to Shore
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Combining rich historical detail and a harrowing, pulse-pounding narrative, Close to Shore brilliantly re-creates the summer of 1916, when a rogue Great White shark attacked swimmers along the New Jersey shore, triggering mass hysteria and launching the most extensive shark hunt in history.
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Captivating and Riveting
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A prominent seafaring environmentalist and researcher shares his shocking discovery of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch in the Pacific Ocean, which inspired a fundamental rethinking of the Plastic Age and a growing global health crisis.
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Informative
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A riveting narrative about the biggest earthquake in North American recorded history - the 1964 Alaska earthquake that demolished the city of Valdez and swept away the island village of Chenega - and the geologist who hunted for clues to explain how and why it took place.
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Fascinating to hear the full story
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The Quiet World
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A riveting history of America's most beautiful natural resources, The Quiet World documents the heroic fight waged by the U.S. federal government from 1879 to 1960 to save wild Alaska - ;Mount McKinley, the Tongass and Chugach national forests, Gates of the Arctic, Glacier Bay, Lake Clark, and the Coastal Plain of the Beaufort Sea, among other treasured landscapes - from the extraction industries.
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Where are Native Alaskans?
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The centerpiece of a major national campaign to indentify and preserve forgotten history, Here Is Where is acclaimed historian Andrew Carroll’s fascinating journey of discovery in which he travels to each of America’s 50 states and explores locations where remarkable individuals once lived or where the incredible or momentous occurred.
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A Man who Loves his Country
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What listeners say about Orca
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Michelle Slaughter
- 05-24-24
Hard to hear, but NECESSARY
At 14 hrs, I thought I would like finish this title in a couple of days, but the truth is that took me a couple of weeks. Some chapters brought me to tears and I had to stop and give the audiobook a long rest for a few days before I could pick it up again. Mr. Colby lays out in sometimes harsh and unrelenting detail the terrible accidents, often through carelessness and just plain greed, that have caused the deaths of Orcas in the scramble to capture them for display and show purposes. And it's beyond frustrating to listen to the sheer ignorance displayed by capture teams and oceanarium owners which points to the fact that they shouldn't have been keeping these whales in the first place.
Narrator Paul Heisch reads the facts of what happened in a very matter-of-fact way, which strangely enough, makes some of those facts hit that much harder. Beyond the accidents like cables on slings breaking while in the air and loose nets entangling the whales, there's the sheer incompetence of oceanarium owners repeatedly making the same mistakes because NOTHING was understood about orcas at the time.
And yet, it's only BECAUSE they were on display that anyone took an interest, that anyone started studying them and watching their mating habits and their feeding habits and learning anything about them. We only started studying them, caring about them, and conserving their numbers once those marine parks started showing the animals.
It's important to read/listen to this book, even when it gets hard to, and to realize how fundamentally the captivity of killer whales is WHY we came to love them in the first place. Some of the men who hunted them for capture are haunted by it; some of them only seemed to ever care about the money, right up to the end. But only through their efforts of bringing the whales to be viewed by the general public did they turn the ocean’s apex predator into mankind's friend.
Without the capture and display industry, would we give a damn about killer whales in the first place? Without captive orcas on display, would they have ever outgrown the title of being killers? Would anyone have fallen in love with them enough to start studying their social habits, their vocalizations, and how to tell them apart from one another? It's possible, of course, but a lot less likely.
For better or worse, the display of captive orcas kick-started conservation efforts, gave birth to organizations like Greenpeace, and implemented a *nearly* world-wide moratorium on whaling. Rather than furthering scientific knowledge by killing and dissecting orcas, we moved slowly into watching the creatures living in their natural habitat. We know as much as we do now because we loved seeing those captive orcas, but we couldn't stand seeing them being kept captive.
It's not an easy book to get through, but it's an important one to read/listen to.
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- Elaine Elmer
- 08-22-24
Very informative, minimized lessons from Tilikum
Presentation could have been better either way a professional. My biggest complaint was that he minimized the lessons learned from Tilikum who lived in captivity for 34 years and sired many babies for Seaworld.
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- Anonymous User
- 09-29-23
informative yet heartbreaking - we must do better
One of my favorite recent listens. This book goes into great detail to explore our relationship with orca whales since the 1960s. Super interesting, heartbreaking, and a call for us all to think more critically about how we interact respectfully with the ocean and its creatures. The narrator is a bit monotone but it really doesn’t matter - you can get over that by the first chapter.
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- Deeedah
- 05-30-23
My heart is forever Orca filled.
This book taught me so much and I fell I inlove with these beautiful animals. My wish is that they could all be free but I know that if not for a trip to Sea World in Florida, where I became mesmerized by their beauty, I doubt I would have ever been able to see one in the wild. Thank you Jason Colby for writing this amazing book and thank you Paul Heitsch for your wonderful narration of it, I was captivated.
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- Eric & Lexi
- 09-21-24
Gives you lots of information on whale events and people in the cetacean world.
This is a wonderful informative read for orca enthusiasts. It mentions many great scientists, naturalists and environmentalists who have fought to save orcas and salmon . You will learn so many things from reading this and it gives many opportunities to dive into different topics and events that have happened in orca history .
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- Picky P
- 05-09-21
Heart rending but necessary read!
I learned so much about orcas, and humans from the stories in this book, but chapter after chapter of death, abuse, ignorance, and arrogance was hard to take. The reader was easy to understand but very haulting and unexpressive. Overall, a humbling history and legacy worth knowing.
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- Ryan
- 01-12-21
The history and story is amazing!
Such a great book. I learned so much about the pacific northwest in such a short time! And about the connection between human and orca.
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