
It is a little-known fact that from 1908–1922, two Norwegian-owned whaling stations operated in
County Mayo, not far from the area that would be at the heart of the Corrib gas controversy a
century later.
Watcher has lived in Mayo most of her life. When she stumbles upon this fact she becomes, like
many before her, obsessed with the whales. Reflecting on colonialism and the climate crisis, she
asks, What is it that makes the men hunt them?
Mariner tries to answer this question. Through poetry influenced by medieval sagas and sea
shanties alike, he tells the story of not just of one whaling voyage, but of the history of
commercial whaling itself. He endeavours to give voice to the working Irish men of a community
since dissolved.
Together the authors weave a conversation that challenges our deeply ingrained assumptions
about human, and animal, nature.
A genre-bending book that blends history, poetry, and documentary, Wake of the Whale asks if
the attitudes that brought whales to the brink of extinction are now threatening our own?