CURRENT MUSIC RELEASES
THE HUMAN, THE ORCHID AND THE OCTOPUS: EXPLORING AND CONSERVING OUR NATURAL WORLD - Jaques Cousteau | THE HUMAN, THE ORCHID AND THE OCTOPUS: EXPLORING AND CONSERVING OUR NATURAL WORLD - Jaques Cousteau |
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| Written by Kindah Mardam Bey | |
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Title: The
Human, the Orchid and the Octopus: Exploring and Conserving Our Natural World
Author:
Jacques Cousteau and Susan Schiefelbein
Publisher:
Pages: 305
ISBN-13:
978-1-59691-417-9
ISBN-10:
1-59691-417-3
Reviewed
By: Kindah Mardam Bey (
“I vote
Green Party, and one day you will too.” I’m convinced this could be an ominous
campaign for the Green Party; especially when people will probably vote en-masse
when it is too late to repair the damages to our world that we have imposed on
it.
My first
official interaction with Jacques Cousteau has been simply mind-blowing; seeing
as The Human, the Orchid and The Octopus was his final decree before
passing away in 1997, I will have the pleasure of working backwards to the
genesis of his writings sequentially. I suspect the message might be similar in
his 1953 classic The Silent World, as it was in his final analysis of
the water’s magnificent beauty that captivated him his entire life. I have
known who Cousteau was growing up, an environmentalist, an activist, an
oceanographer, a teacher of the deep blue, and it’s most beloved student, an
underwater filmmaker, an author, ecologist, naval officer and most certifiably
French….
What I had
never realized previous to reading The Human, The Orchid and The Octopus,
was what a mesmerizing and captivating Professor Cousteau was to us all. Over a
decade after his death, this book is a timely, and Nostrodamus styled
foretelling of what the earth has become up to his passing, and even after his
passing. Cousteau was so much an authority of where the earth was headed, that
his premonitions of what the future would hold are based solidly in science and
uncanny in accuracy.
Co-author
Susan Schiefelbein does a resplendent job of writing about Cousteau as she knew
him (through writing for his documentaries), her thoughts and opinions of him,
then allowing Cousteau to speak for himself throughout the bulk of the book,
and then doing an up-to-the-present update of Cousteau’s ideas as a type of
epilogue. Schiefelbein was clearly an admirer of Cousteau and it was easy to
see why through her interactions with him. In fact, her opening story to the
prologue, about travelling into deepest
When you
commence into the words of Cousteau you are struck by his pragmatic and “been
there, done that” attitude to topics like saccage, Nuclear Weapons,
exploration, pollution, safety, all of these subjects have interesting and
thought-provoking stories of Cousteau’s own recollections that propel his wisdom
from merely astute to sage. I could quote Cousteau repeatedly in a day now,
with such emblematic gems as “The survival of our species, is linked to the
survival of our thoughts.” Or “finite and fragile, miniscule but majestic; air
and water, the fluids of life. These we pollute.” The ironic question mark left
hanging in anticipation of no answer.
Cousteau
talks about the term “saccage” which he invented to describe the deliberate
aggression and destruction towards the earth. He tells a poignant story of the
Jivaro-Achuaras tribe, living close to the Peru-Ecuador frontier, who
deliberate over felling a tree for the use of a new canoe. They pray to the
gods to forgive them for doing such an action, but the chief, Kukush, didn’t
feel it was enough to simply pray, so he planted several hundred more. Cousteau
says “they were saplings; they would never grow to serve him or his tribe
within his lifetime. These trees were for his grandchildren. They were for
Earth.” I live in a community full of trees and in the eight years I have
co-existed in this area, over forty trees have been chopped down for the lame
excuse that they are “dead.” A complete falsity 96% of the time; I know why it
is done, because they love the sound of the chain saws, and need the wood for the
winter fireplaces, and think it is a fun thing to watch on a Saturday…and revel
in the saccage.
The
Human, The Orchid and The Octopus is possibly one of the most underestimated but definitive
works of this time in history. If we will all end up voting Green Party in a decimated
world by our own making, then Cousteau will have been our prophet of
environmentalism. Mind you, I’ve heard that terrible things happen to prophets,
they get crucified, and even worse then that, Cousteau’s prophetic words of wisdom
could simply be ignored and float into the ocean’s abyss. The Human, The
Orchid and The Octopus should be High School mandatory reading. Cousteau’s
message is simple, and the younger generations need to hear it. One of the best
books I have read all year!
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