This Thanksgiving weekend, I drove for about 23 hours, all told, and listened to two audiobooks. The first, for those of you keeping track, was Christopher Moore's Practical Demonkeeping. It was a good audiobook-- the reader, Oliver Wyman, did a good job handling different characters and narration.
The really fantastic book, the book that I listened to for almost eight hours, basically straight through, is Cod: A Biography of the Fish that Changed the World.
I dubbed my experience with this book the Codcast.
Photo: Hans-Petter Fjeld (CC-BY-SA)
The audiobook was interesting, not least because the book was interesting. The narrator, Richard M. Davidson, initially sounded exactly like Steve Inskeep of NPR. I got really excited, and it was kind of a letdown when it turned out not to be him. Davidson seems to be a master at the not-quite-an-accent: enough of a lilt to know we're talking to someone from Iceland/Newfoundland/Wales, but not a jarring full-on accent by any means.
And this book. Oh, this book. To listen to this book, you could come to the following conclusions:
- Cod is responsible for the discovery of America.
- Cod is responsible for the American Revolution.
- Cod is responsible for bringing Iceland out of the middle ages during World War II.
- Cod is responsible for most of Canada.
- Cod is not really responsible for slavery, but cod did keep it profitable by providing a cheap protein source.
- Without cod, life as we know it will end.
- Especially because fishermen are our nation's greatest natural resource.
- (Aside from cod.)
(Aside: Googling "Fish in costume" will really only get you pictures of people wearing fish costumes and no costumed fish. I am imagining a picture of a fish wearing a red coat, like the Redcoats wore, and staring out with glassy eyes, to accompany this passage. The internet did not provide. The closest things I could find was a dog in a fish costume (at least it wasn't a human?) and this picture:
In other fish-related news, here are the Top 10 Coelacanth Stories of 2011.
Please pay special attention to number 8, which features a hulu depicting how Coelacanth were almost fished to extinction and it is GLORIOUS. An obscure government agency promoting conservation through dance? Women in purple jangle dresses, men miming fishing, dancing, a happy little tune that at times turns sinister... I literally cannot ask for more from a youtube video. Here, just watch it for yourself:
I repeat: GLORIOUS. But, as a commenter pointed out, the "fishing to near extinction" probably happened millions and millions of years ago. He was not properly watching the jangle dresses, methinks.
Oh, what's that? You want a disturbing fish picture that I ran across while trying to find "fish wearing shirts?" Okay.
You're welcome.