The Perfect Storm : A True Story of Men Against the Sea (Cassette/Abridged)

by Sebastian Junger
The Perfect Storm : A True Story of Men Against the Sea (Cassette/Abridged)  
published May 6th 1997 by Random House Audio
binding Audio Cassette
isbn 0679460357   (isbn13: 9780679460350)
description Meteorologists called the storm that hit North America's eastern seaboard in October 1991 a "perfect storm" because of the rare combination...more
date added
04-29-08



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The Perfect Storm 1 02/13/2008 01:12PM

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Literary journalism / creative nonfiction
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Robert Beveridge
02/11/08

bookshelves: finished, owned-and-gave-away
Read in August, 2000
Sebastian Junger, The Perfect Storm (Norton, 1997)

Lots of buzz around this book. Lots of buzz around this movie. Oddly, I don't remember there being lots of buzz around this storm itself.

While Junger begins and ends with the Andrea Gail (and his last chapter lends its sinking an almost supernatural air a la the supposed curse surrounding Rebel Without a Cause), there is far more to this book than the story of six guys and a boat. Of course, what more there is is about more people and more co...more
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Eric
07/03/08

bookshelves: natural-disaster, non-fiction
Read in July, 2002
Junger uses an increasingly popular medium to tell this true story: creative non-fiction. More than just telling a story or stating facts, creative non-fiction uses fictional elements, such as theme, foreshadowing, and dialogue, to tell a true story in a novel-like manner.

The author faces two choices in writing creative non-fiction. He can inject himself in the story or leave himself out of it. Those who involve themselves usually relate some kind of journey or quest they've accomplished, o...more
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Ginnie
11/13/07

bookshelves: science
Read in January, 2000
My female heart was delighted here to pick up the thread of Linda Greenlaw as a smart fishingboat captain. Unlike nearly everyone else here I did not see the movie so my mental picture of the captain of the Andrea Gail doesn't have a George Clooney overlay. I loved this just for the words on the page.

In October 1991, three weather systems collided off the coast of Nova Scotia to create a storm of singular fury--the perfect storm. Impeccable research...supports this solid account. Junger ex...more
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Marichka
Read in January, 2001
recommends it for: true-adventure fans, marine enthusiasts
Fantastic journalism. I read this after I saw the movie, and I'm glad, because I think they complement each other nicely...it helped to have faces to attach to the main characters on the Andrea Gail and I was impressed at how faithful the film was, especially in depicting the characters of the men described. The book goes much farther in telling the backstories of the Andrea Gail crew members, and also describes in considerable technical detail the buidlup of the storm. It also adds different pe...more
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Beth
10/04/07

bookshelves: nonfiction
Read in October, 2007
I thought this would be a pretty interesting book - I had vaguely heard the story when the movie came out, although I haven't seen the movie.

The Perfect Storm is a great name for the book, as the book revolved around the storm that took out the Andrea Gail. It gave a lot of good information about fishing, but overall I wasn't impressed by the book, especially when it concerns the Andrea Gail. The synopsis on the back of the book annoyed me, because I thought the book was going to be entire...more
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Michael
Read in January, 2001
recommends it for: Mariners, coastal residents and arm chair sailors
One of the greatest aspects of this book is how Sebastian portrays life around the docks of most any New England fishing village. The book is readable to any audience, but those who have an interest in sea going adventure stories will probably enjoy this best. It is obvious he thoroughly researched this book in regards to deceased crew member family, life aboard longline fishing vessels, and gritty bars like the Crow's Nest and Gov. Bradford ;) One of the most impressive aspects to me was his re...more
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Irishcoda
Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in July, 2007
I'd seen the movie in 2001 or 2002 and so I knew how the story would end but I was curious to know how the author, Sebastian Junger, would present the story of the Andrea Gail when there'd been no survivors. One of the things I really liked was that Junger didn't try to make a fictional accounting of what might have happened. He said straight out he didn't know. Instead, he interviewed people who'd survived the storm, rescuers and people in need of rescue. I learned more than I ...more
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Jennifer
Read in July, 2007
recommends it for: people who don't mind being depressed and are interested in MA and maritime history
This was pretty good and read really quickly, especially toward the end. The quite drawn-out description of what it's like to drown was terrifying, as well as the description of what the ocean is like in a storm like that. I'm scared of the ocean so I found it oddly fascinating in a horrific way. I also thought that the very real importance of dreams and premonitions was described in the book--crewmen would get a "bad feeling" about going out with a boat and family members would dre...more
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Maureen
bookshelves: non-fiction
Read in January, 2001
recommends it for: everyone
I admire people who brave the elements to do hard work, none more so than the denizens of the fishing community depicted in this book. Junger did a fine job in capturing their lives, these people who earn a living from the sea. At the end of the fishing season, even knowing bad weather is coming, the Andrea Gail's skipper decides to make one more run, hoping to haul in a final catch before the storm hits. Anxiety builds, as weather reports come in of brutal weather ahead. Still, there is tha...more
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Cam
07/10/08

bookshelves: 2008
Read in July, 2008
I enjoyed this book, it was different than I expected, it wasn't so much a story about the Andrea Gail, but about the dangers of the ocean. I learned some amazing things while reading this, some of the information I got lost in, some of it was over my head, but for the most part it was easy to follow. I really enjoyed learning more about "PJ's" (pararescue jumpers), and about the force of the ocean- I cannot imagine waves over 10 stories high- and for all of you Oregonians- waves tha...more
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Matthew
Read in November, 2007
Here is one of my all-time favorite reads. I like it because it's true, the writing is brilliant, the research is impressive and I was born in MA and lived through that storm, in fact, I was on vacation in York Beach, ME and sat in our shitty little cottage as the storm raged, as fishermen died and tried to save the dying out on the ocean that, on the evening of the third day of that storm, my family watched from the rocks. I'd never seen waves that big battle and crash so far out in the ocean, ...more
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Fiona
04/08/08

recommended to Fiona by: My best friend who knows the guy who wrote it - fluke
recommends it for: Everyone who loves the sea
I love this book - I have read it about a million times. It's compelling because of the people involved, something that was also portrayed in the tears-by-numbers film of the same name. Where the film is a two hour soap opera (exciting with good effects, but still soapie) the book relies on the factual information presented for its punch. It provides an account of the fishing industry in the noreastern US, the dangers inherent in the job (fishing is the most dangerous job in the US, even more th...more
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Eva
12/05/07

Read in December, 2007
I had heard that this book was good but I thought it was sort of boring. I don't know anything about boating and I think you have to have some boating knowledge before reading this book. There are pages and pages of descriptions about what a swordfishing boat looks like, using words I had never even heard of! It would have been helpful if there was a diagram of the boat, just as there was a map of the Atlantic at the beginning of the book that was a great reference. What I did like about the boo...more
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Jonathan
Read in December, 2005
recommends it for: Anyone interested in adventure or nautical fiction.
One of my favorite nautical stories of all time, this is an epic tale of a boat of deep-sea fishermen stranded at sea during one of the biggest storms in the past century. Junger does an excellent job of portraying the dread of the sailors and their families as the ordeal plays out, and this is the main selling point of the story. One of the biggest themes is the frailty of human life, and the epic measures that will be taken to save it.

The characters are drawn up very well; all of the sailo...more
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Joey
04/21/08

recommends it for: people who like adventure and fishing.
Its about a crew of fisherman who go out swordfishing and get caught in hurricane Grace. What I don't like about the book is that it gives too much background information. What I do like though is how it captures the scenario of the storm and the biography it gives on each one of the crew members. At the end you find out whether or not they survive the massive storm or if they drown.

The boat they use is the Andrea Gail which is a swordfishing boat. For trips they would buy hundreds of dollar...more
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Kevin
06/18/08

Bear in mind that this is a true story. In 1991, a swordfish boat captained by Billy Tyne is lost during the storm of storms in the North Atlantic. This book attempts to capture the last moments of the crew through sheer speculation and lots of research as to what it must be like to be in such a storm. The book can be roughly broken into four different stories - the history of deep sea fishing in the North Atlantic, the scientific reasoning behind the storm formation, the lives of those who live...more
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Caroline
bookshelves: non-fiction
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for: people who like the sea
I happened to be on the Outer Banks of North Carolina as Hurricane Grace was steaming up the coast to link up with the other 2 storm systems to form "The Perfect Storm". We were eventually evacuated because of high seas; the sky was a brilliant blue but the ocean was totally white, something I had never seen before and haven't seen since.

This is characteristically well researched by Sebastian Junger and I enjoyed the details on the weather, boat building, and the lives and work of ...more
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Dave
07/12/08

Read in July, 2008
recommended to Dave by: John Sable
It's true - the book really IS better than the movie! After reading this I am wondering why anyone decided to make a movie about it. There are so many details regarding weather, waves, boats, fishing, history, and more that are so integral to the excellence of this book. These would be impossible to include in a movie and obviously they were left out. In other words: Movie=crap, book=amazing.

The details that Junger gets into are fascinating. The part of the book where he gives an in-dep...more
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Wendy
05/24/07

bookshelves: nautical
Read in January, 2001
Loved it! I'm pretty sure that when I first read this book, I had a 15-month preaching gig in Rockport, MA, and a little rental cottage on the sea wall on Rocky Neck in Gloucester, so that intensified the impact, I'm sure. I'm a huge fan of books about the sea and about storms and I thought this was a particularly interesting, gripping, and well-written one. Loved all the meterological facts and all the stuff about waves. I'm really a big non-fiction girl, to tell the truth, and I felt like I l...more
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Maggie
02/20/08

Read in January, 2007
Could not put this book down. Pace of the book is very quick. Really interesting peek into the lives of people that I would probably never cross paths with, yet their stories are so compelling and the outcomes (for some) so heart-breaking. The more technical info (about the ships, the weather, etc.) is written in a way that is understandable, but not overly simplified, and very interesting, even for someone like me who doesn't have any special interest in these things. There is drama, action, s...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.75 (1733 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 4.50 (2 ratings)
number of reviews: 192






other editions

The Perfect Storm: A True Story of Men Against the Sea (Hardcover)
The Perfect Storm: A True Story of Men Against the Sea (Mass Market Paperback)
The Perfect Storm: A True Story of Men Against the Sea (P.S.)