Today's guest is a really special one - award winning author James Bradley is on the show to chat about his new book - Deep Water - The World in the Ocean.
I can't say enough good things about this book. It is a beautiful, immense telling of our ocean and the planet's aquatic systems, and how humans are interacting with and slowly eroding a critical aspect of what enables our stable civilisation to exist and to be maintained. It weaves James' own experience of encountering the ocean, the experts studying it and the incredible array of non human species we share this planet with. It charts a course through the issues humanity are imposing on the ocean and some of the histories behind these - over fishing, acidification, plastic pollution, deep sea mining, human exploitation - but also reveals the most delicate and fragile stories of beauty and wonder that are largely invisible to us as humans. The diel vertical migration, the fish species running a cleaning service for other species, the kinship of krill and the riches their bounty provides to many oceanic food systems, including humanity's. James also offers his own experience humbly and beautifully, sharing his own moments of awe and wonder but also acting as a character in this book himself - his own personal experience in building and sharing this masterly act representative of how each and every one of us have been, are currently and will be affected by the great shifts occurring in and to the oceans.
Deep Water revealed how little I know about the ocean and its ecosystems. I love the beach, being in the ocean is one of the most wondrous experiences I can have. The sense of smallness and awe that comes from being in the waves, or sitting beside it and becoming hypnotised by the constant breaking of waves on the shoreline. So many of my favourite memories are connected to the ocean, yet this book humbled me and has changed me.
Just this week, NOAA, the National Atsmopheric Administration's Coral Reef Watch, has announced a fourth planet wide mass bleaching event. The Great Barrier Reef has just experienced one of if not its most severe bleaching event. Yet, it's passed largely unreported. It's what many suspect will happen to corals, reefs and the diversity of life they support - they are in a terminal state of decline. We're unconsciously aware of this, but James brings vivid detail to the perilous and cruel state of decline humans have imposed on other beings on this earth, and does it over and over by outlining other declining aquatic system declines.
Yet despite the loss and damage we march on, progress, or is that mindless chasing, our avoidance tool to deep and honest reflection - if I only I get this next thing, it'll all fall into place. This book reveals perhaps that it is not about doing more but in fact doing less - less fishing, less polluting, less use, less access. Not only is humanity's relationship to earth broken in a terrestrial context, it is also broken to what is in and under our oceans, what we don't see and don't know.
James is an award winning author and was also presented with an OAM in 2021 for services to literature as a writer. He's authored a tonne of novels, poetry and anthologies, and Deep Water is his first non fiction book. The importance of someone of his craft and mastery bringing that to the climate and environmental crisis space is significant, as we need all the help we can get, especially in relation to helping to share and understand the challenges we face, and what to do next as both citizens and a collective.
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