Tag Archives: Philip Hoare

Philip Hoare + EISF = Fabulous!

Last Friday, Philip Hoare appeared at the Edinburgh International Science Festival, giving a talk called “The State of the Whale.” The author of many wonderful and fascinating books, Hoare has most recently found fame with his latest book “Leviathan”, which deservedly won the BBC Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction last year.

Reminiscent of another great writer, the late W.G. Sebald, Hoare’s “Leviathan” is wonderful for its fusion of fact, history and literature with the personal, resulting in a quite extraordinary book. Leaving the bookshop after buying it, I promptly buried my head in it — slowly wandering home reading it, and almost in tears before I was thirty pages in. Upon realising that I had reached the half-way ‘tipping’ point brought genuine distress that it would soon be over, but even then I couldn’t stop myself from reading on, devouring the second half of the book in a single day.

Having looked forward to “The State of the Whale” for weeks, I am happy to report that Hoare’s talk was excellent. As someone who has read “Leviathan”, I was delighted to finally hear from the man who wrote it; to see pictures of his studies and to hear more about his personal experiences with whales. We were told about different types of whale and their behaviour, shown shown real teeth and baleen and treated to images from Hoare’s own whale-watching. The highly personal way that Hoare spoke about his own obsession with whales and about his travels around the world to watch and learn about them was utterly engaging, and I sat enraptured.

Hoare’s talk was wonderful in conveying the scale of these wonderful, elusive mammals and revelling in their mysterious nature — for such large creatures, they are seen only in glimpses at the ocean’s surface and as yet have not been monitored or filmed at depth. The talk was tragic too, in revealing the devastation inflicted on these huge, intelligent beasts by mankind’s long history of whaling. With many species hunted to the point of extinction by the twentieth century, the anti-whaling movement and anti-whaling legislation have done much to aid the recovery of certain species. For others, like the North Atlantic Right Whale, it may already too late. As whalers targeted large males as prized catches, they removed the strongest individuals from the gene pool. The species may never recover.

In a world awoken to the importance of conservation and caring for our fragile environment and ecosystems, we need the voices of passionate individuals to ring out and remind us of the intrinsic power and beauty of the natural world. In an age when our lives are dominated by the artificial and constructed realities of electronic media and life in modern cities, we must not forget our sense of wonder at the natural world — the world that gives life and sustains us all.

An eye-opening, informative, fascinating and entertaining talk, “The State of the Whale” reminded me of the wonderful abundance of life on our planet; life that is beautiful, brutal, mysterious, and perpetually struggling for survival. Evolved to the point that we have, it is our duty to protect and support these other forms of life. With the possibility of a return to whaling coming as early as next year, is it not time to think about the intrinsic value of the natural world around us, instead of its value as a commodity to be captured, traded, and capitalised on?

After the talk I kicked myself for not bringing my copy of “Leviathan” with me to be signed, and my mum obligingly stepped in a bought me a new copy. I spoke to Philip briefly, and told him that I find his writing magnificent. Now that my new copy of “Leviathan” has taken its place on the mantlepiece, it’s time for my unsigned copy to go on a journey of it’s own: being passed first to my mum and then from friend to friend, most highly recommended. I urge you to read it.

Edinburgh International Science Festival – Oh JOY!

Today has been a happy day for my inner geek.

On picking up and flicking through this year’s programme for the EISF, I involuntarily let out a squeal of delight. This also caused me to confess my latest, and most wrong-indeed man crush to two complete strangers, who were interviewing me for a job. (And yes, I do imagine that my chances of getting said job were much diminished, if not destroyed outright, by my outburst.)

The object of my latest mental dalliance is Brian Cox, presenter of BBC 2′s ‘Wonders of the Solar System’. Man of science, physicist extraordinaire, and all round wonderful creature, he somehow makes talking about things that I will never be able to understand the most engrossing thing ever. Planets and physics, I’m talking about you. Sigh.

Yes, you have my full and undivided attention...

Anyway. What was I talking about?

Oh yes. The wonderful news is that this fine man of science is going to be in Edinburgh for some events during the Science Festival that include a screening of ‘Wonders of the Solar System’ at the Filmhouse on the 12th April at 8:30pm followed by a Q&A (gasp!), and a talk at Edinburgh University’s Informatics Forum, ‘Why does E=mc2?’ on the 11th April at 8:00pm. I will be most certainly be going to both. Yippedy yip yip, and indeed, hooray!

Now, imagine my delight then when, already quivering and almost frantic with joy, I turned the page to discover that Philip Hoare will be giving a talk called ‘The State of the Whale’ on the 9th April at 8:00pm (Informatics Forum, again). He’s the writer of two of my favourite books — ‘Serious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant’ and ‘Leviathan’ — and an absolutely astonishingly gifted writer at that: stylistically sublime and bursting with erudition, with a surprisingly emotional quality that I find irresistable. I cried in the street reading ‘Leviathan’ — and it was only the first chapter proper, how shaming! He is, quite simply, one of the greatest writers around.

In Awe of the Awesome

Lawd! Walking through Leith Links at this point, festival programme clutched in hand, I was ready to lie down among the crocuses and joyfully expire… what looked like three rabid dogs running wild off the leash only just prevented me from doing so.

In Awe of the Awesome, or: Who I want to be when I grow up

What's written on his t-shirt? Damn right!

Philip Hoare: not only a man of discerning taste — he’s written books about Oscar Wilde and Noël Coward (the second best thing to come out of Teddington, after myself) — but a man remarkable for two reasons:

1. After a rather misguided decision to write my Advanced Higher English personal study on “Moby Dick” (which resulted in the creation of a parallel text within my copy of the book through the green inked marginalia that detailed the complete mental collapse I suffered in trying to read the bloody thing), only this particular man could make me voluntarily pick up and read another book about a whale. (Incidentally, it’s called ‘Leviathan’ and is wonderful. Please read it).

2. He wrote a rather magnificent book called ‘Serious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant’, which is the best biography I have ever read, if not one of the best works of non-fiction I’ve ever come across. Having recently acquired my own copy, it sits in pride of place on my mantlepiece. ‘Serious Pleasures’ is a wonderful book about an equally wonderful, though curious, man who flitted from party to party in the 1920s as one of the brightest of the Bright Young People, had a turbulent love affair with Siegfried Sassoon (whom I also adore), liked to sprinkle gold dust in his hair and spent his life time talking about a novel, Lascar, that he never finished; only to become a virtual recluse and spend — purportedly — the final years of his life in bed. Written in an exuberant and eloquent style, Hoare brings Tennant wonderfully to life, and at least once a week I find myself sitting down with a cup of tea to delve into the delights of the book at random.