What the Wild Sea Can Be, 9781804710531
Paperback
Ocean’s past holds keys to its future; fight for it.
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What the Wild Sea Can Be

shortlisted for the women's prize for nonfiction

$25.76

  • Paperback

    320 pages

  • Release Date

    29 September 2025

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Summary

What the Wild Sea Can Be: A Hopeful Exploration of Our Ocean’s Future

SHORTLISTED FOR THE WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR NON-FICTION LONGLISTED FOR THE BAILLIE GIFFORD PRIZE FOR NON-FICTION

No matter where we live, “we are all ocean people,” Helen Scales observes in her bracing yet hopeful exploration of the future of the ocean. Beginning with its fascinating deep history, Scales links past to present to show how prehistoric ocean ecology holds lessons f…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781804710531
ISBN-10:1804710539
Author:Helen Scales
Publisher:Atlantic Books
Imprint:Grove Press
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:320
Release Date:29 September 2025
Weight:292g
Dimensions:198mm x 129mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

In elegant prose the author offers a manifesto of hope: providing answers to global problems while inspiring a sense of awe at the majesty that has long existed beneath the waves * The Times *Authoritative and entertaining…a passionate look at how saving the seas is an essential part of saving ourselves…The author’s writing is lucid and compelling, featuring a nice mix of personal experience and convincing scientific data * Kirkus Reviews *In What the Wild Sea Can Be Helen Scales has created something remarkable: a thrillingly expansive, deeply personal and often startlingly beautiful portrait of the ocean and its inhabitants that also charts a path to a better and more sustainable world. Urgent, exhilarating and marvellously researched and written, it is necessary reading for anybody who cares about the future of the planet – James Bradley, author of DEEP WATERHere is one of our greatest communicators whose brilliance as a scientist is matched by her sublime skill as a writer. Helen Scales paints a dazzling picture of our seas from top to bottom and all around the edges to show us why - and how - we must protect them. She is not afraid to spell out what we stand to lose if we don’t change our ways, and it is terrifying… This is a book of love and urgency and sense. What the Wild Sea Can Be dives deep into the titanic power of the ocean’s life-giving system. It is rich and fascinating, stirring and mind-expanding, and utterly essential – Keggie Carew, author of BEASTLYA wonderfully wise and richly researched examination of our blue planet’s extraordinary and precarious living seas; I learned so much from this delightfully detailed book. Scales is the perfect guide on a dive into these fascinating ocean ecosystems, whence the reader surfaces newly galvanised to protect its wonders – Gaia Vince, author of NOMAD CENTURYWritten by a highly articulate expert in the field, [it is] so comprehensive and insightful that it will be a long time before it’s surpassed – Tim Flannery * New Statesman (on THE BRILLIANT ABYSS) *Stylish, eloquent … Enthralling and richly expressed and highlights how closely our lives depend on the deep – Robin McKie * Guardian (on THE BRILLIANT ABYSS) *It is, indeed, weirdness all the way down, and Scales’s bestiary is a wonderful introduction to its variety…Scales’s enthusiasm for her subject is matched by a gift for visual evocation – Steven Poole * Daily Telegraph (on THE BRILLIANT ABYSS) *Scales’s great gift is for transmuting our awe at the wonders of the deep sea into a kind of quiet rage that they could soon be no more * New York Times Book Review (on THE BRILLIANT ABYSS) *

About The Author

Helen Scales

Dr Helen Scales is a marine biologist, acclaimed author and broadcaster who explores the wonders and plight of the oceans and the living planet. Her books, including The Brilliant Abyss and Spirals in Time, have been adapted for stage and screen, and translated into 15 languages. She writes for National Geographic Magazine and the Guardian, teaches at Cambridge University and is a storytelling ambassador for the Save Our Seas Foundation. Helen divides her time between Cambridge, England, and the wild Atlantic coast of France.

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