A pair of award-winning writers teams up to chart the mysterious migration of the Eastern Pacific gray whale from Alaska to Mexico in this powerful look at a divisive clash between environmentalists and Native American coastal tribes.
For fifty million years, the gray whale - the most ancient of all great whales - has evolved along the western shores of North America. Its 10,000-mile migration from its summer feeding grounds in the Bering Sea to its winter birthing lagoons in Baja, Mexico, represents a timeless story - one that exceeds the rational boundaries of science and speaks to many worlds, both human and cetacean.
In 'Sightings', celebrated Chickasaw writer Linda Hogan and acclaimed novelist and naturalist Brenda Peterson look at the rich past and divisive present of the gray whale, including the conflict between vigilante environmentalists who seek to protect the species and Native American tribes who traditionally hunt them.
The authors illuminate as never before the complex and fascinating perspectives that surround this monumental migration - from tribal members, scientists, and fishermen to eco-warriors, businessmen, and historical whalers.
Suffused with the authors' lyricism and clear-eyed passion, 'Sightings' is a revelatory, often haunting, and altogether triumphant amalgam of accessible science, compelling history, incisive anthropology, and powerhouse storytelling.